Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Files Constitutional Challenge Of Alberta's Fuel Restriction Law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 May, 2018 11:24 AM
    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government filed a constitutional lawsuit Tuesday countering an Alberta government bill that would limit fuel being sent to the province.
     
     
    It comes weeks after the B.C. government asked its highest court to decide if it has the right to limit the flow of bitumen in the Trans Mountain pipeline.
     
     
    Alberta Premier Rachel Notley saw some irony in B.C.'s position.
     
     
    "It's very interesting, on one hand they don't want our oil and on the other hand they're suing us to give them our oil," she told a news conference in Edmonton on Tuesday.
     
     
    The latest legal action further strains an acrimonious relationship between the two provinces over the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline.
     
     
    Attorney General David Eby said B.C. is prepared to ask for an injunction and financial damages against Alberta if it restricts the flow of fuel.
     
     
    Notley said the lawsuit is just one of several tactics to create uncertainty over the Kinder Morgan pipeline project.
     
     
    "They must think everybody was born yesterday," Notley said. "They are still reserving the right to play legal rope-a-dope until the cows come home. That is not a thing we are going to let happen."
     
     
    Plans to triple the capacity of Kinder Morgan's existing Trans Mountain pipeline from Edmonton to Burnaby have pitted Alberta and the federal government against B.C., which says the risk of a bitumen spill is too great for the province's environment and economy.
     
     
    Eby said the Alberta and the federal government are causing delays by refusing to accept B.C.'s invitations to join legal cases, or take legal arguments straight to the Supreme Court of Canada where the outcomes are final.
     
     
    The B.C. government has filed a reference case in the provincial Court of Appeal to determine if it has jurisdiction to regulate heavy oil shipments. It also joined two other lawsuits launched by Indigenous groups opposed to the $7.4-billion pipeline project.
     
     
    Eby said the lawsuit filed Tuesday in Alberta's Court of Queen's Bench challenges the constitutionality of Alberta's law because it is intended to punish B.C. 
     
     
    "We believe it would be reckless in the extreme and therefore highly unlikely that Alberta will actually attempt to use the powers they granted themselves in Bill 12," he told a conference call. "If Alberta did take the remarkable step of attempting to use this law, we are prepared to immediately file and injunction. We will not hesitate."
     
     
    Notley bowed out of a Western premier's meeting on Wednesday in Yellowknife, saying she could not discuss issues like a national prescription drug plan in the presence of B.C. Premier John Horgan while his government is trying to stop the pipeline project.
     
     
    "Pharmacare does not grow on trees," Notley said. "In order to protect and improve the things that matter to people, like pharmacare, we need a strong, functioning national economy."
     
     
    Before he left for the meeting, Horgan said he didn't expect tensions over the pipeline to dominate discussions among the premiers.
     
     
    Kinder Morgan has ceased all non-essential spending on the project until it receives assurances it can proceed without delays, setting a May 31 deadline for those guarantees.
     
     
    Notley said Alberta and the federal government are both working on plans to ensure the project proceeds. Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau has offered an indemnity to backstop the pipeline project.
     
     
    B.C.'s nine-page statement of claim alleges the intent of Alberta's bill is to hurt to the province.
     
     
    "A significant disruption in the supply of gasoline, diesel, and crude oil from Alberta to British Columbia would cause British Columbia irreparable harm," the document asserts. "In addition to economic harm, a sudden disruption in supply could injure human health and safety in remote communities."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Search Underway In B.C. After Man Swept Into Squamish River, RCMP says

    Search Underway In B.C. After Man Swept Into Squamish River, RCMP says
    Police say they are searching for a man who was swept into the Squamish River in B.C. early Sunday morning.

    Search Underway In B.C. After Man Swept Into Squamish River, RCMP says

    Alberta School Division Sorry After Employee Dressed Up As Spice Girl With Blackface

    Alberta School Division Sorry After Employee Dressed Up As Spice Girl With Blackface
    SHERWOOD PARK, Alta. — An Alberta school division has apologized after a staff member at a Christian school wore blackface while dressed up as a member of the British band Spice Girls.

    Alberta School Division Sorry After Employee Dressed Up As Spice Girl With Blackface

    Married Canadian Humanitarian, 60, Is Charged With 'Raping Two Young Boys In Nepal

    Married Canadian Humanitarian, 60, Is Charged With 'Raping Two Young Boys In Nepal
    A prominent Canadian aid worker has been arrested at his mountain villa in Nepal and charged with sexually abusing children, an official said Monday.

    Married Canadian Humanitarian, 60, Is Charged With 'Raping Two Young Boys In Nepal

    Trudeau Calls Quebec Byelection Days After Visit, $60M Funding Pledge In Riding

    Trudeau Calls Quebec Byelection Days After Visit, $60M Funding Pledge In Riding
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has called a byelection for the Quebec riding of Chicoutimi-Le Fjord, only days after pledging $60 million in federal funding for an aluminum-smelting project in the area.

    Trudeau Calls Quebec Byelection Days After Visit, $60M Funding Pledge In Riding

    Jaspal Atwal Charged With Uttering Threats Against Punjabi Radio Host

    Jaspal Atwal Charged With Uttering Threats Against Punjabi Radio Host
    He allegedly made the threats outside a Punjabi radio station in Surrey, a Vancouver suburb, on April 23.

    Jaspal Atwal Charged With Uttering Threats Against Punjabi Radio Host

    Constant Public Scrutiny Of My Personal Life Uncomfortable: Virat Kohli

    Constant Public Scrutiny Of My Personal Life Uncomfortable: Virat Kohli
    Virat and Anushka, fondly called "Virushka" by their fans, dated for four years before tying the knot in an intimate affair in Tuscany, Italy, last December.

    Constant Public Scrutiny Of My Personal Life Uncomfortable: Virat Kohli