Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Indigenous Protesters In Washington Declare Trans Mountain Won't Be Built

The Canadian Press, 18 Jun, 2018 01:27 PM
    VANCOUVER — Cedar George-Parker remembers the moment he decided to devote his life to defending Indigenous people and their traditional territories. It was the one-year anniversary of a shooting at his high school that killed four of his classmates in Marysville, Wash.
     
     
    "I dropped to my knees and I said, 'I'm going to make a change in the world,' " he recalled.
     
    George-Parker is among the Indigenous protesters in Washington state promising to fight the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion. Activists call the project the Standing Rock of the north, comparing it to the fierce Standing Rock Sioux protests that stalled the Dakota Access Pipeline for months.
     
    The Trans Mountain expansion — recently bought by Canada for $4.5 billion — doesn't only affect Canadian waters or land. The project will increase tanker traffic seven-fold in the Salish Sea, which borders British Columbia and Washington, and Kinder Morgan has noted the expansion potential of a connected 111-kilometre pipeline that runs from B.C.'s Fraser Valley to Washington refineries.
     
    Many Indigenous activists trace their roots to both sides of the border. George-Parker's father is from North Vancouver's Tsleil-Waututh Nation and his mother is from Washington's Tulalip Tribes. He travels to B.C. often and in April disrupted a speech by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Vancouver.
     
    "Our people never had borders," he said. "We still try not to let borders separate us."
     
    The 2014 shooting at Marysville Pilchuck High School deeply affected George-Parker, now 21. He found it outrageous that governments subsidize big business while underfunding education and counselling for young people. Canada's purchase of Trans Mountain is the latest example of wasted government money, he said.
     
    Washington Gov. Jay Inslee has criticized Trudeau's government for buying the pipeline project, calling it a "major step backward" in the climate change fight.
     
    Even though Inslee opposes the expansion, some protesters in his state don't feel supported. Police arrested Janene Hampton in January and charged her with criminal trespassing after she and several other Indigenous women camped on the state capitol lawn to protest resource projects including Trans Mountain.
     
     
    Hampton also camped at the Standing Rock protest for months. She joined the movement against pipelines to protect the water, said Hampton, a member of the Colville Okanagan Tribe, which has traditional territories spanning B.C.'s southern Interior to northeast Washington.
     
     
    "One of the big fights for us as Aboriginal people is the whales," she said, adding they use sonar, and existing vessel noise has already disrupted their communication.
     
     
    Canada's $1.5-billion oceans protection plan includes $7.2 million to increase the use of technologies that monitor underwater noise. It has also announced other steps to support the recovery of the endangered southern resident killer whale population, which lives in B.C. and Washington waters.
     
     
    The Canadian government often touts its oceans protection plan as "world-leading," but as recently as May 2017, officials in Washington raised questions about Canada's preparedness for an oil spill.
     
     
     
    Washington required Kinder Morgan to conduct a worst-case scenario exercise. The company simulated a spill of 3,024 barrels of heavy synthetic crude oil in the Sumas River, which runs from B.C.'s Fraser Valley to Whatcom County, Wash.
     
     
    In a report following the exercise, state ecology department staff wrote that Kinder Morgan brought together a skilled spill management team including staff from U.S., Canadian, B.C. and Washington government agencies. But the report also said non-floating oil tactics planned on the Washington side were not planned on the B.C. side, and Canada did not discuss the type of equipment it would use to clean up a major spill.
     
     
    The exercise was conducted to meet U.S. regulatory requirements and was not focused on the Canadian response, said James Stevenson, a spokesman for the National Energy Board. A joint U.S.-Canadian plan to respond to cross-border spills exists but was not activated during the May 2017 exercise, he said.
     
     
    Canada's purchase of the project includes the Puget Sound pipeline, a 111-kilometre line that diverts from the existing Trans Mountain pipeline in B.C. and carries oil to four Washington refineries. Environmental groups now fear an expansion to the Puget Sound line, citing 2017 financial disclosure documents in which Kinder Morgan touted the potential for increasing capacity.
     
     
    "That is definitely a big concern," said Rebecca Ponzio, campaign director for Stand Up to Oil, a coalition of U.S. groups that oppose new oil terminals and coastal exports.
     
     
    Canada's Department of Finance did not directly answer a question about whether it would consider expanding the Washington line, but it said it planned to follow Kinder Morgan's 2018 construction schedule for the expansion of the pipeline in B.C. and Alberta.
     
     
    Trans Mountain, a subsidiary of Kinder Morgan, said market conditions dictate how much crude oil is transported through the Puget Sound pipeline. While the line could be expanded, the company expects the majority of the expansion capacity from the Trans Mountain project will be for export from a marine terminal in Burnaby, B.C.
     
     
    But protesters won't allow construction on the expansion to proceed without a fight.
     
     
    "That pipeline will never go through," said Paul Wagner, a member of the Saanich First Nation who lives in Redmond, Wash., and goes by the traditional name Cheoketen.
     
     
    "The people are rising up."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.

    First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.
    Officers were called to a rural residence near Cranbrook in May 2010, and found 43-year-old Leanne MacFarlane dead and 42-year-old Jeffrey Taylor in critical condition.

    First-Degree Murder Charges Laid In 2010 Double Homicide Near Cranbrook, B.C.

    WATCH: Driver Pepper-Sprayed Over Honking Spat In Montreal, Police Open Probe

    WATCH: Driver Pepper-Sprayed Over Honking Spat In Montreal, Police Open Probe
    Montreal police opened an internal investigation Monday after a widely shared video showed an officer pepper-spraying a black driver liberally in the face over alleged excessive honking.

    WATCH: Driver Pepper-Sprayed Over Honking Spat In Montreal, Police Open Probe

    Aldo Footwear Chain Erroneously Caught Up In Canadian-US Trade Dispute

    Aldo Footwear Chain Erroneously Caught Up In Canadian-US Trade Dispute
    MONTREAL — Quebec footwear retailer Aldo found itself temporaily at the heart of the current Canadian-U.S. trade dispute after being linked to President Donald Trump.

    Aldo Footwear Chain Erroneously Caught Up In Canadian-US Trade Dispute

    Trump Attacks Put Fresh Focus On Canada's Supply-Managed Dairy System

    Trump Attacks Put Fresh Focus On Canada's Supply-Managed Dairy System
    U.S. President Donald Trump upped the ante on Canada's supply-managed dairy system over the weekend as he repeatedly warned that the country would face repercussions unless it is dismantled.

    Trump Attacks Put Fresh Focus On Canada's Supply-Managed Dairy System

    Crews Search For Toronto DJ PARTHEEPAN SUBRAMANIAN Who Fell Off Boat In Lake Ontario

    Crews Search For Toronto DJ PARTHEEPAN SUBRAMANIAN Who Fell Off Boat In Lake Ontario
    Emergency crews are searching Lake Ontario for a Toronto DJ who fell overboard.

    Crews Search For Toronto DJ PARTHEEPAN SUBRAMANIAN Who Fell Off Boat In Lake Ontario

    Man Who Called Police Says He Was Upset When Lisa Dudley Was Found Days Later

    Man Who Called Police Says He Was Upset When Lisa Dudley Was Found Days Later
    A man who called police after hearing gunshots in his Mission, B.C., neighbourhood in 2008 says he was upset when Lisa Dudley was found dying in her home days later.

    Man Who Called Police Says He Was Upset When Lisa Dudley Was Found Days Later