Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

City Of Burnaby Loses Trans Mountain Court Battle, Ordered To Pay Company's Costs

The Canadian Press, 24 Nov, 2015 12:40 PM
    VANCOUVER — The City of Burnaby's bylaw battle against the Trans Mountain pipeline has been shut down by a B.C. Supreme Court judge who has declared that the National Energy Board rules take precedence over the city's.
     
    The Metro Vancouver city has tried to hamper preliminary planning in advance of laying the 1,100-kilometre-long pipeline between Alberta and coastal B.C. through two separate bylaws.
     
    But Justice George Macintosh said in a ruling posted online Monday that the National Energy Board has the constitutional power to direct or limit the enforcement of Burnaby's bylaws.
     
    Macintosh said the energy board can take such action when city bylaws interfere with or block the regulation of the pipeline and expansion project, ruling NEB laws are supreme. 
     
    "Where valid provincial laws conflict with valid federal laws in addressing interprovincial undertakings, paramountcy dictates that the federal legal regime will govern," said Macintosh.
     
    "The provincial law remains valid but becomes inoperative where its application would frustrate the federal undertaking."
     
    Macintosh ruled the city's bylaws were lawful but constitutionally inoperative and inapplicable.
     
    "Burnaby appears from the filed evidence to be using the bylaws to make Trans Mountain's preliminary work on the expansion project difficult, if not impossible, to undertake," he added.
     
    A spokeswoman for the City of Burnaby said officials received Macintosh's ruling on Monday and will be reviewing the decision and considering an appeal.
     
     
    Ali Hounsell, with the Trans Mountain expansion project said in an email that the court's decision simply reaffirms earlier rulings upholding the NEB's jurisdiction as it relates to the project.
     
    Macintosh decided not to rule on a separate constitutional question raised by the city, calling the question "an abuse of process."
     
    In that question, the city asked the court to rule that the energy board did not have the "constitutional jurisdiction" to direct or limit the enforcement of bylaws by the city.
     
    Macintosh declined to answer the question, noting the city had failed to win the same argument in earlier hearings before the Federal Court of Appeal and the energy board.
     
    The city was ordered to pay the company's legal costs.         
     
    The dispute dates back to Dec. 16, 2013, when Trans Mountain asked the energy board for a certificate for the expansion project.
     
    Mounties arrested more than 100 people during protests last year on Burnaby Mountain, where Trans Mountain crews were conducting test drilling at two locations.
     
    A judge later tossed out civil contempt charges against many of the activists who were arrested for violating a court injunction ordering them to stay away from the drilling areas.
     
    The company admitted that it had provided the wrong GPS co-ordinates when it asked for the original court order and the measurements were so inaccurate that the site was outside the area covered by the injunction.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty
    Sid Frankel, one of the report's authors, says more children in Manitoba are slipping into poverty despite a provincial strategy introduced in 2009.

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report
    The report by the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS says opioids such as oxycodone are increasingly being overprescribed for patients who become dependent on the medication.

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report

    Ontrio Police Denounce Trophy Hunting After Headless Deer Carcasses Found

    Ontrio Police Denounce Trophy Hunting After Headless Deer Carcasses Found
    Police say a resident found the carcasses — which were missing their heads and fur — around noon Monday in North Dumfries, near Cambridge.

    Ontrio Police Denounce Trophy Hunting After Headless Deer Carcasses Found

    Shaida Bandali, Former Rouge Valley Hospital Clerk Fined $36,000 For Selling Patient Information

    Shaida Bandali, Former Rouge Valley Hospital Clerk Fined $36,000 For Selling Patient Information
    Former hospital clerk Shaida Bandali has been sentenced to two years' probation, 300 hours of community service and $45,000 in penalties for handing over the personal information of new mothers to investment dealers

    Shaida Bandali, Former Rouge Valley Hospital Clerk Fined $36,000 For Selling Patient Information

    Wounded Oct. 22 Officer Tells His Story As 20 Honoured For Bravery

    Wounded Oct. 22 Officer Tells His Story As 20 Honoured For Bravery
    Const. Samearn Son was one of 20 parliamentary security officers and Mounties honoured Monday at RCMP headquarters for their bravery on Oct. 22 of last year.

    Wounded Oct. 22 Officer Tells His Story As 20 Honoured For Bravery

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris
    A meeting of Canada's first ministers Monday in Ottawa — the first in almost seven years — ended with 11 provinces and territories humming from the same environmental hymn book as Trudeau's newly elected Liberals.

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris

    PrevNext