Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Company Announces Amidst Protests That Mount Polley Mine Could Restart In Months

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Apr, 2015 10:42 AM
    VICTORIA — The open-pit, gold-and-copper mine hit by a devastating tailings pond breach that caused an environmental disaster in central British Columbia could be operating safely and near full capacity within months, the company has announced.
     
    Steve Robertson, vice-president of corporate affairs at Imperial Metals Corp., (TSE-Ill), said Wednesday that more than 50 per cent of Mount Polley's 370 employees would be back at work if the Vancouver-based company is granted a permit to restart operations.
     
    "If we get a permit approving the restart of the mine in June, it's going to take a few weeks, but within a few weeks we would be able to be up and running," he said. "What we're proposing is a modified restart."
     
    Robertson said the startup phase would not be full speed.
     
    He said 276 people were employed doing restoration in March, but those numbers are fluctuating.
     
    Environmental and aboriginal groups say they will oppose any decision that allows Mount Polley, blamed for spilling 24-million cubic metres of silt and water into nearby lakes and rivers last August, to resume operations.
     
    "We don't want it to reopen," said Kanahus Manuel, a spokeswoman for the Williams Lake area Secwepemc Women Warriors Society.
     
    "What I know for a fact is a small group of people can do a lot. We have these small pockets of people everywhere, and together we make up hundreds of thousands of people who are opposed to mining and destruction of our territory."
     
    The warriors' society was part of protests at the Toronto Stock Exchange, B.C. government offices, the Canadian consulate in Los Angeles and Portland State University in Oregon.
     
    "When it comes down to it we are talking about clean water," said Manuel. "That tailings pond will be forever. That destruction that they did there and all those tailings they are not cleaning up will be there forever."
     
    B.C.'s Energy and Mines Minister Bill Bennett said Imperial Metals must prove to a mine development technical review body Mount Polley can resume operations safely, on a temporary and permanent basis.
     
    A 30-day public comment period on Mount Polley's application to reopen ends May 2.
     
    The review body includes representatives from government agencies, First Nations, local governments, the community of Likely, Fisheries and Oceans Canada and Environment Canada.
     
    An independent, government-ordered report concluded earlier this year the construction of Mount Polley's tailings pond on top of a sloped glacial lake weakened the foundation of the dam and was akin to loading a gun and then pulling the trigger.
     
    It said the spill was caused by an inadequately designed dam that didn’t account for drainage and erosion failures associated with glacial till beneath the pond.
     
    Bennett said he is deeply aware of the environmental, economic and social concerns associated with the mine-permit decision.
     
    "There are a lot of families up there worried about their jobs," he said. "You get pulled in both directions. I want to make sure it's done absolutely flawlessly from a policy point of view. I also want to see those families working."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Joe Oliver Says Conservatives Will Keep Promise To Introduce Balanced Budget Law

    Joe Oliver Says Conservatives Will Keep Promise To Introduce Balanced Budget Law
    TORONTO — Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the Conservative government will introduce balanced budget legislation.

    Joe Oliver Says Conservatives Will Keep Promise To Introduce Balanced Budget Law

    Longtime archbishop of Montreal, Cardinal Jean-Claude Turcotte, dead at 78

    MONTREAL — Cardinal Jean-Claude Turcotte, who oversaw the funerals of NHL great Maurice (Rocket) Richard and former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau during his 22 years as archbishop of Montreal, died early Wednesday after a lengthy illness. He was 78.

    Longtime archbishop of Montreal, Cardinal Jean-Claude Turcotte, dead at 78

    B.C. Snowmobiler Captures Harrowing Video Of Being Buried Alive In Avalanche Near Sicamous

    B.C. Snowmobiler Captures Harrowing Video Of Being Buried Alive In Avalanche Near Sicamous
    Curtis Johnson, 52, captured harrowing video from a helmet-mounted camera of spinning in a sea of white powder during a sledding trip with three friends near Blue Lake, between Sicamous and Revelstoke, late last month.

    B.C. Snowmobiler Captures Harrowing Video Of Being Buried Alive In Avalanche Near Sicamous

    Desi 'Bombshell Bandit', Sandeep Kaur, Jailed For 66 Months For Robbing Four Banks In Three US State

    Desi 'Bombshell Bandit', Sandeep Kaur, Jailed For 66 Months For Robbing Four Banks In Three US State
    Besides serving 66 months in prison, An Indian-origin woman from California, nicknamed the "Bombshell Bandit" was ordered to repay the $40,000 taken in the four robberies.

    Desi 'Bombshell Bandit', Sandeep Kaur, Jailed For 66 Months For Robbing Four Banks In Three US State

    Richmond RCMP Say 'Jealous' Aunt Wei Wang Convicted Of Assault For Pouring Glue In Baby Nephew's Ear

    Richmond RCMP Say 'Jealous' Aunt Wei Wang Convicted Of Assault For Pouring Glue In Baby Nephew's Ear
    VANCOUVER — A bizarre case of deceit, jealousy and the cultural pressures of conceiving male offspring has landed a woman in jail, police say.

    Richmond RCMP Say 'Jealous' Aunt Wei Wang Convicted Of Assault For Pouring Glue In Baby Nephew's Ear

    B.C. Man On Trial For Terrorism Dismisses Mall Bomb Plot As Too Childish: Trial

    B.C. Man On Trial For Terrorism Dismisses Mall Bomb Plot As Too Childish: Trial
    VANCOUVER — Planting bombs in a shopping mall wasn't enough for an accused terrorist, who referenced the 9-11 attacks in the United States to describe what he had in mind for British Columbia, a court has heard.

    B.C. Man On Trial For Terrorism Dismisses Mall Bomb Plot As Too Childish: Trial