Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Clayoquot Sound Activists Head To B.C. Pipeline Protest Site To Be Arrested

The Canadian Press , 26 Nov, 2014 12:01 PM
    BURNABY, B.C. — Activists who were part of the Clayoquot (clah-CWOT) Sound anti-logging protests in British Columbia in the early 1990s say they plan to be arrested at an anti-pipeline protest near Vancouver.
     
    Kinder Morgan's plans to expand its Trans Mountain pipeline have become the focus for anti-pipeline protests, and at least 90 people have been arrested since last week for violating a court injunction.
     
    More than 800 people were arrested during a blockade of logging trucks into Clayoquot Sound, on Vancouver Island, in a summer of protests dubbed the War in the Woods.
     
    Valerie Langer, who was an organizer with Friends of Clayoquot Sound at the time, says she and two other women who were involved in the movement will be on Burnaby Mountain today.
     
    Langer says the trio plans to cross the police line and refuse to move, which she expects will end in her arrest.
     
    She says the Kinder Morgan survey work has become a breaking point for pipeline opponents, who feel they have been failed by regulators and the courts.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Patient at Belleville General Hospital tests negative for Ebola disease

    Patient at Belleville General Hospital tests negative for Ebola disease
    BELLEVILLE, Ont. - A patient at Belleville General Hospital in southern Ontario has tested negative for the Ebola virus.

    Patient at Belleville General Hospital tests negative for Ebola disease

    September home sales down from August, first monthly decline since January: CREA

    September home sales down from August, first monthly decline since January: CREA
    OTTAWA - The Canadian Real Estate Association says home sales through its Multiple Listings Service in September fell 1.4 per cent on a month-over-month basis, the first monthly decline since January.

    September home sales down from August, first monthly decline since January: CREA

    BC Appeals Teachers' Victory, Points Finger At Union's Refusal To Budge

    BC Appeals Teachers' Victory, Points Finger At Union's Refusal To Budge
    VANCOUVER - A lawyer for British Columbia's government is challenging a judge's ruling that it acted unconstitutionally when it deleted hundreds of clauses over working conditions involving its teachers' union.

    BC Appeals Teachers' Victory, Points Finger At Union's Refusal To Budge

    'British Columbia is prepared for possible Ebola patient'

    'British Columbia is prepared for possible Ebola patient'
    VICTORIA - British Columbia's medical health officer says current infection-control guidelines are appropriate and the province is prepared if someone tests positive for Ebola.

    'British Columbia is prepared for possible Ebola patient'

    $7.9-billion Site C dam on Peace River gets environmental approval from B.C. and Ottawa

    $7.9-billion Site C dam on Peace River gets environmental approval from B.C. and Ottawa
    B.C.'s Environment Minister Mary Polak said the province remains convinced building the dam is in the public interest and its benefits  outweigh the risks of significant adverse environmental, social and heritage effects.

    $7.9-billion Site C dam on Peace River gets environmental approval from B.C. and Ottawa

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Officers Shot Peter DeGroot Who Set Off Five-day Manhunt

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Officers Shot Peter DeGroot Who Set Off Five-day Manhunt
    SLOCAN CITY, B.C. - British Columbia's police watchdog has confirmed that a man who set off a five-day police search was shot and killed in a confrontation with two members of the emergency response team.

    B.C. Police Watchdog Says Officers Shot Peter DeGroot Who Set Off Five-day Manhunt