Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

First Nations' Report Calls For 'Super Fund' To Cover Mine Disasters

The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2015 12:05 PM
    VICTORIA — A mining organization representing B.C. First Nations wants companies to bank roll an emergency fund that will cover the cost of disasters similar to last summer's Mount Polley tailings dam collapse.
     
    The North Vancouver-based B.C. First Nations Energy and Mining Council states in a 42-page report released today that mining operations threaten more than 230 northern aboriginal and non-aboriginal communities and even the drinking water of Prince George, Terrace and Smithers.
     
    The report, Uncertainty Upstream: Potential Threats from Tailings Facility Failures in Northern British Columbia, states that 35 tailing ponds at 26 mines and in 48 watersheds could also impact 8,678 kilometres of fish-bearing waters.
     
    Dave Porter, the mining council's chief executive officer, says First Nations analyzed and surveyed mine-tailings ponds following last August's incident at the Mount Polley mine near Likely in central B.C. 
     
    He says the report calls for improved emergency measures, which should involve companies funding a response team. 
     
    "It is now time for us to talk about a super fund," he says.
     
    "Any mining company that operates in B.C. should be required to post funding contributions to the establishment of a super fund, and the purpose of that fund would be able to resource an emergency response once a catastrophe like this happens."
     
    He says the fund should be more than $200 million.
     
    Porter also says the report is not anti-mining.
     
    "Absolutely not," he says. "That's not the position of our organization. We're not saying, 'No,' to mining. What we're saying is we've got to mine better."
     
    In fact, the mining council states the report should serve as a resource to help communities understand the risks associated with tailings dams.
     
    "It is not intended to imply that all of the tailings facilities analyzed will at some point fail, rather, it is meant to provide a comprehensive summary of potential threats from future tailings facility failures in northern B.C.," the report states.
     
    An independent, government-ordered report concluded earlier this year that the spill of 24 million cubic metres of silt and water into nearby lakes and rivers from Imperial Metals Corp.'s (TSX:III) Mount Polley open-pit, copper-and-gold mine was caused by an inadequately designed dam.
     
    The report found the dam didn’t account for drainage and erosion failures associated with glacial till beneath the pond.
     
    Al Hoffman, B.C.'s chief inspector of mines, says in a statement the government is committed to implementing the recommendations of the independent panel report into the disaster.
     
    He says he has already required B.C.'s operating mines to provide letters by June 30 that confirm the structure of their tailings ponds, including understanding of their strength.
     
    B.C. is also moving to establish independent tailings dam review boards.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Incoming Alberta Premier Rachel Notley Suspends Rookie Over Photo

    Incoming Alberta Premier Rachel Notley Suspends Rookie Over Photo
    EDMONTON — Incoming Alberta NDP premier Rachel Notley has suspended a rookie member of her caucus over a social media photo deemed homophobic by the party.

    Incoming Alberta Premier Rachel Notley Suspends Rookie Over Photo

    Court Orders Feds To Turn Over Files On Leak About Former Terror Suspect

    Court Orders Feds To Turn Over Files On Leak About Former Terror Suspect
    A Canadian man the federal government once accused of terrorism has won a small victory in his ongoing legal battle for compensation for damaging leaks of government documents to the media.

    Court Orders Feds To Turn Over Files On Leak About Former Terror Suspect

    B.C. Man Gets 2.5 Years In Prison After Crash That Left Nurse With Spinal-Cord Injury

    B.C. Man Gets 2.5 Years In Prison After Crash That Left Nurse With Spinal-Cord Injury
    A 22-year-old B.C. man has been sentenced to two and a half years in prison for a hit-and-run crash that left a licensed practical nurse a quadriplegic.

    B.C. Man Gets 2.5 Years In Prison After Crash That Left Nurse With Spinal-Cord Injury

    $20-Million Fund To Help Sex Workers Get Out Of The Industry Is 'Over-Subscribed'

    $20-Million Fund To Help Sex Workers Get Out Of The Industry Is 'Over-Subscribed'
    There are more groups than money available for the government's proposed $20 million plan to get sex workers out of the industry, Justice Minister Peter MacKay said Friday.

    $20-Million Fund To Help Sex Workers Get Out Of The Industry Is 'Over-Subscribed'

    Yosef Gopaul Sentenced To 12 Years In Prison For Killing Surrey Hockey Mom; Says Sorry, Wants Rehab

    Yosef Gopaul Sentenced To 12 Years In Prison For Killing Surrey Hockey Mom; Says Sorry, Wants Rehab
     The family of a British Columbia woman whose motto was "money isn't worth dying for" wept as a 28-year-old man was sentenced for manslaughter after blindsiding her with a rock to the head outside a neighbourhood ice arena.

    Yosef Gopaul Sentenced To 12 Years In Prison For Killing Surrey Hockey Mom; Says Sorry, Wants Rehab

    Vancouver Aquarium Dolphin Hana In Critical Condition After Surgery

    One of two Pacific white-sided dolphins at the Vancouver Aquarium is in critical condition after groundbreaking emergency surgery for a gastrointestinal disorder.

    Vancouver Aquarium Dolphin Hana In Critical Condition After Surgery