Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Senate committee says oil tanker ban off B.C. targets Alberta, divides country

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2019 06:45 PM

    A Senate committee says the Trudeau government's bill to ban oil tanker traffic off British Columbia's northern coast will divide the country, inflame separatist sentiment in Alberta and stoke resentment of Indigenous Peoples.

    Worse, the Senate's transportation and communications committee says the bill is a cynical, intentional bid to cripple the economy of Prairie provinces, particularly Alberta, and curry political favour elsewhere in the country.

    And the committee says it's driven by the calculation that the ruling Liberals have few seats to lose in Alberta and Saskatchewan.

    Those conclusions are contained in the committee's report on Bill C-48, which formalizes the moratorium on tanker traffic in the ecologically sensitive waters off northern B.C.

    The committee last month passed a motion to kill the bill, supported by Conservative members and Independent Sen. Paula Simons, who represents Alberta.

    The report, written by committee chair and Conservative Sen. David Tkachuk, explains why the committee believes the government should not proceed with the bill; it was approved late Monday on division — that is, without a recorded vote, but noting some opposition.

    The Senate as a whole must now decide whether to accept or reject the report and its recommendation to kill the bill.

    The report has a sharp, partisan flavour, including an assertion that the bill is "not as advertised" — the same tag line Conservatives use in a series of ads attacking Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

    Combined with other Trudeau government measures like rejecting the Northern Gateway pipeline proposal and proposing more stringent environmental assessment rules for energy projects, the report argues the Liberals are "land-locking Prairie oil" and telling Alberta and Saskatchewan "that they have a lesser place in Confederation."

    "This is not just a matter of dampening the economic interests of specific provinces. It is a nationally corrosive and divisive policy which pits one region against another, inflaming separatist sentiment and stoking a misplaced resentment of Indigenous Canadians," the report says.

    The ban on tankers carrying diluted bitumen from Alberta's oil sands appears to be "intentionally designed to damage the economy of western Canada," rendering the bill "both divisive and discriminatory," the report adds, going on to say that "targeting one region of Canada for economic punishment is unconstitutional and destructive to the fabric of Canadian federalism."

    The report also maintains that the bill is "motivated above all else by partisan political considerations" — the Liberals have only three seats in Alberta and one in Saskatchewan, compared to 17 in B.C. — and says it's "deeply inappropriate for a ruling political party to consider only the regions of Canada where it is electorally competitive when crafting legislation."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    More Women, Few Minorities: Docs Detail Results Of Liberal Patronage Overhaul

    More Women, Few Minorities: Docs Detail Results Of Liberal Patronage Overhaul
    Documents from the Privy Council Office show that as of last year, 55.5 per cent of appointees to federal agencies, boards and organizations were women, slightly above their proportion in the Canadian population.

    More Women, Few Minorities: Docs Detail Results Of Liberal Patronage Overhaul

    Canadian Retaliatory Tariffs Lifted As U.S. Kills Steel Aluminum Penalties

    Canadian Retaliatory Tariffs Lifted As U.S. Kills Steel Aluminum Penalties
    OTTAWA — Canada collected more than $1.27 billion from the retaliatory tariffs on U.S. products over the last year and all of it will go to the Canadian steel and aluminum industry even though the steel trade war with the United States is over.

    Canadian Retaliatory Tariffs Lifted As U.S. Kills Steel Aluminum Penalties

    Two Kids From U.S. Rescued After Spending Night Alone On Burke Mountain In Coquitlam

    Two Kids From U.S. Rescued After Spending Night Alone On Burke Mountain In Coquitlam
    Two Children Are Now Safe After Spending The Night On Steep Terrain On Burke Mountain In Coquitlam, After Getting Lost While On A Hike With Their Father On Sunday

    Two Kids From U.S. Rescued After Spending Night Alone On Burke Mountain In Coquitlam

    Canadian Pilot Patrick Forseth Killed In Honduras Plane Crash: Sister

    A British Columbia woman says her pilot brother was killed in a plane crash in Honduras on Saturday.

    Canadian Pilot Patrick Forseth Killed In Honduras Plane Crash: Sister

    Money Laundering Report A Wake-Up Call For Canada, But Some Provinces Skeptical

    The authors of a report that found $47 billion was laundered across Canada last year debated whether to include a graph that indicated Alberta, Ontario and the Prairies were hotspots for dirty money, says the lead writer.

    Money Laundering Report A Wake-Up Call For Canada, But Some Provinces Skeptical

    RCMP Video Brings Home Reality In A 'Visceral Way': Former Truth And Reconciliation Chairman

    The 2012 video was released publicly by APTN this week as a result of a court proceeding and has prompted political reaction, including from the federal public safety minister, who called its contents "absolutely abhorrent."

    RCMP Video Brings Home Reality In A 'Visceral Way': Former Truth And Reconciliation Chairman