Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rachel Notley To Skip Premiers Conference So She Can Focus On Pipeline Deal

The Canadian Press, 22 May, 2018 11:53 AM
    EDMONTON — There won't be any fireworks between the premiers of Alberta and British Columbia at the Western premiers conference this week, because Alberta Premier Rachel Notley isn't going.
     
     
    B.C.'s John Horgan and Notley, who have butted heads over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project, were both scheduled to be in Yellowknife at the conference, which begins with an event Tuesday night before the premiers get down to business on Wednesday.
     
     
    But Cheryl Oates, a spokeswoman for Notley, said in an email Monday afternoon that Notley will be staying in Alberta to complete a deal to secure the construction of the pipeline.
     
     
    Kinder Morgan has ceased all non-essential spending on the project until it receives assurances it can proceed without delays, setting a May 31 deadline on getting those guarantees.
     
     
    "With 10 days remaining before Kinder Morgan's deadline, my only priority is to make sure the pipeline gets built," Notley said in a tweet.
     
     
    Deputy Premier Sarah Hoffman will be attending the conference on Notley's behalf.
     
     
    Horgan said last week that B.C. and Alberta disagree on the pipeline expansion, but that he and Notley are in agreement on a number of other issues, and have been friends for 20 years.
     
     
    Horgan said he didn't anticipate any high tension at the conference, even when Notley was still planning to be there, and that he expected the main focus of the meeting to be the development of a national pharmacare program.
     
     
    Notley, however, fired back on Twitter on Monday evening.
     
     
    "It would be surreal and exceptionally tone deaf for anyone to think we could politely discuss pharmacare and cannabis when one of the players is hard at work trying to choke the economic lifeblood of the province and the country," the Alberta premier wrote.
     
     
    Horgan wasn't commenting Monday on Notley's decision to skip the conference.
     
     
    Alberta has passed legislation allowing it to limit fuel exports to B-C, but British Columbia countered by announcing plans for a lawsuit that would declare Alberta's legislation unconstitutional.
     
     
    Even without the Alberta premier's presence at the premiers conference, Horgan could still face pressure from other premiers.
     
     
    Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe said last week that he wants to speak about the pipeline's benefits when he's at the conference.
     
     
    "I'm very concerned that we are missing an opportunity here in this nation to advance our economic benefit here, not just in Saskatchewan, but in Western Canada and the nation of Canada," Moe said.
     
     
    Moe has said the federal government should withhold sending federal infrastructure money to B.C. over that province's opposition to Trans Mountain.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    One Man Dead, One Arrested After Early Morning Altercation In Vancouver

      Police and paramedics responded to reports of an injured man at Kingsway and Nanaimo Street just before 1:30 a.m.

    One Man Dead, One Arrested After Early Morning Altercation In Vancouver

    Quebec School Boards Say They're Not Ready For New Surge Of Asylum Seekers

    Quebec schools are feeling the pressure as asylum-seeking families with young children continue to cross the U.S. border into the province.

    Quebec School Boards Say They're Not Ready For New Surge Of Asylum Seekers

    US Woman Sentenced To Life In Valentine's Day Shooting Plot At Halifax Mall

    A Chicago-area woman who came to Halifax to go on a planned Valentine's Day shooting rampage at a mall has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for a decade.

    US Woman Sentenced To Life In Valentine's Day Shooting Plot At Halifax Mall

    Tim Horton Raises More Than $800k For Humboldt With Yellow And Green Doughnut

    Tim Hortons says the sale of a doughnut bearing the colours of the Humboldt Broncos has helped raise more than $800,000 for the junior hockey team that was involved in a horrific collision earlier this month. 

    Tim Horton Raises More Than $800k For Humboldt With Yellow And Green Doughnut

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford Student Thinks Staff Trying To Poison Him: Court

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford Student Thinks Staff Trying To Poison Him: Court
    A man accused of murdering a student at a high school in Abbotsford, B.C., has been found unfit to stand trial because of his mental state.

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford Student Thinks Staff Trying To Poison Him: Court

    Justin Trudeau Ends Three-Country Tour With His Global Reputation, Alliances Intact

    Justin Trudeau Ends Three-Country Tour With His Global Reputation, Alliances Intact
    Justin Trudeau is heading home from a lengthy, three-country foreign tour in which the prime minister appeared to recapture his international mojo and reassert several key alliances, but didn't sign off on any big deals or declarations.

    Justin Trudeau Ends Three-Country Tour With His Global Reputation, Alliances Intact