Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Hydro Going To Court To Evict Site C Dam Protesters From Outside Head Office

The Canadian Press, 28 Apr, 2016 11:41 AM
  • BC Hydro Going To Court To Evict Site C Dam Protesters From Outside Head Office
VANCOUVER — BC Hydro is going to court in a bid to evict opponents of a hydroelectric dam project camped outside their downtown Vancouver office.
 
The utility company filed a notice of civil claim and an application for an injunction in B.C. Supreme Court Wednesday, alleging protesters opposed to the company's Site C dam project are trespassing on BC Hydro property and causing the company harm.
 
The protesters have been stationed outside the company's head office 24 hours a day since March 13, after a B.C. Supreme Court judge granted an injunction to remove protesters from a tent camp at the $8.8 billion megaproject's construction site near Fort St. John, B.C.
 
Documents filed for the new injunction application allege protesters have vandalized the building, urinated, defecated and smoked marijuana on the property, dug up portions of the lawn, and harassed and intimidated employees, visitors and passers-by.
 
None of the allegations have been proven in court.
 
The documents said the camp began as two tents and has grown to include more than a dozen tents, canopies, banners and tarps.
 
 
BC Hydro said in a statement that the camp now poses health and safety risks for the company's employees and members of the public.
 
The statement said campers were informed earlier this month that they do not have permission to be on the property overnight and that they can express their opinions in a designated area during the day.
 
Campers were asked to remove their tents, tarps, wood structures and latrine, but have not complied.
 
Kristin Henry, one of the protesters named by BC Hydro in the court documents, said she was surprised by the injunction.
 
Henry said she has not been staying at the camp since she was hospitalized following a hunger strike last month, but has visited and the protest is going well.
 
"Things are peaceful and happy and wonderful," she said. "I think the news of the injunction will come out as a pretty big surprise because we're totally within our rights to publicly protest a public issue."
 
The court injunction will not shutdown the protest, Henry said.
 
 
"I don't see people standing down and letting this dam happen."

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Breaking Its Own Export Control Rules With Saudi Deal, Say Opponents

Canada Breaking Its Own Export Control Rules With Saudi Deal, Say Opponents
OTTAWA — A group of peace and human rights organizations is renewing a call on the Trudeau government to rescind export permits for the sale of Canadian-made, armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia.

Canada Breaking Its Own Export Control Rules With Saudi Deal, Say Opponents

Canada Must Pave The Way For A 'Smart' And Green Transportation System: Marc Garneau

Canada Must Pave The Way For A 'Smart' And Green Transportation System: Marc Garneau
  TORONTO — The transport minister says the country needs to make its transportation system smarter and greener.

Canada Must Pave The Way For A 'Smart' And Green Transportation System: Marc Garneau

Corporate Canada Investments In Top Tax Havens Up 17 Per Cent In 2015: New Data

Corporate Canada Investments In Top Tax Havens Up 17 Per Cent In 2015: New Data
Canadians for Tax Fairness crunched the numbers and found that Canadian corporations invested almost $40 billion last year in the top 10 tax haven destinations for Canadian capital — taking investment totals since 1990 to $270.2 billion.

Corporate Canada Investments In Top Tax Havens Up 17 Per Cent In 2015: New Data

Rachel Notley Heading To Washington, D.C., To Extol Alberta's Climate-Change Plan

Rachel Notley Heading To Washington, D.C., To Extol Alberta's Climate-Change Plan
Notley says Alberta taking steps to reduce its carbon footprint is a story that needs to be emphasized with decision-makers and those with reach and influence.

Rachel Notley Heading To Washington, D.C., To Extol Alberta's Climate-Change Plan

Two-thirds Of Quebecers In Favour Of Gun Registry: Survey

Two-thirds Of Quebecers In Favour Of Gun Registry: Survey
Leger's poll for PolySeSouvient comes as provincial lawmakers study Bill 64, which, if passed, would create Canada's only provincial long-gun registry.

Two-thirds Of Quebecers In Favour Of Gun Registry: Survey

Indigenous Economy Worth $1.1 Billion In Atlantic Canada, Study Finds

Indigenous Economy Worth $1.1 Billion In Atlantic Canada, Study Finds
The study says the indigenous economy creates more than 16,700 full time equivalent employment positions and contributes $184.5 million in overall tax revenues.

Indigenous Economy Worth $1.1 Billion In Atlantic Canada, Study Finds