Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trans Mountain Granted Injunction Against Pipeline Protesters At Two B.C. Sites

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Mar, 2018 07:16 PM
    VANCOUVER — Protesters must be restrained from obstructing the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline, says a British Columbia Supreme Court judge who has granted the company an injunction aimed at preventing people from entering within five metres of two work sites.
     
     
    Justice Kenneth Affleck said Thursday he felt it necessary to make a decision on the second day of a hearing instead of issuing a written order involving outraged demonstrators who have blocked vehicles and workers at the Burnaby Terminal and the Westridge Marine Terminal.
     
     
    The injunction is indefinite, allowing Trans Mountain to continue work it's legally entitled to do after the federal government approved the twinning of an existing pipeline from Edmonton to Burnaby in the belief it is in the best interest of Canada, Affleck said.
     
     
    Trans Mountain has said that while protests began last November, it sought an injunction after demonstrators began intensifying their blockades recently when trees were being cleared. It said construction at the sites in Burnaby, B.C., is expected to last until December 2020.
     
     
    Affleck agreed with lawyers for two of 15 named defendants in a notice of civil claim that a 50-metre perimeter as part of an interim injunction he granted last week was too broad because it encroached on private property and trails. 
     
     
    Trans Mountain's lawyer, Shaun Parker, requested a structure called Camp Cloud near the Burnaby Terminal be removed, calling it a "hotbed of aggressive activity" for protesters who want to "destroy the project."
     
     
    But the judge said it will stay.
     
     
    "In my view there has to be a means of allowing the protesters who object to this work to remain reasonably close to the site," Affleck said. "The plaintiff is going to have to tolerate a certain amount of agitation."
     
     
    Parker was also unsuccessful in his request for an order requiring the removal of a structure called the Watch House, saying it's on a pipeline right of way and would cause significant safety risks.
     
     
    "I'm sensitive to the concern of those who created this Watch House, that it is of considerable significance to them," Affleck said of the structure that was erected near the Burnaby Terminal on Saturday, when people marched against the pipeline.
     
     
     
     
    He said Trans Mountain would have to demonstrate any emergency need to remove the Watch House but would then have to replace it.
     
     
    Casey Leggett, a lawyer for one of the defendants, said citizens have a constitutional right to protest the expansion of the pipeline.
     
     
    "The inconvenience, which my friends call a blockade, hasn't gotten to the level of establishing irreparable harm," Leggett said.
     
     
    He read from affidavits presented in court by a Trans Mountain lawyer, saying the company's security staff noted protesters have sometimes stood peacefully at or near access roads to two marine terminals in Burnaby without disrupting vehicles or workers and left after police arrived.
     
     
    He said in one case, a woman was seen praying on a road and didn't engage with security staff while on another day a woman sat in a lawn chair as vehicles were guided around her at slow speed.
     
     
    Affleck said while the first protesters' conduct was unobjectionable, the second woman had no right to sit in the middle of a public road and the police would be justified in removing her.
     
     
    The judge also suggested Leggett was cherry-picking incidents that did not involve blockades aimed at stopping work at the terminals.
     
     
    Leggett replied that Trans Mountain had done the same and also focused on blockades rather than inconvenience, which he said does not justify an injunction.
     
     
    Activists have said they will continue opposing the $7.4-billion project despite the injunction.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bodies Of Drowned Teen Boy, Young Man Recovered From Popular Harrison Lake

    Bodies Of Drowned Teen Boy, Young Man Recovered From Popular Harrison Lake
    Witnesses pulled one person to safety, but a 16-year-old boy and a 24-year-old man were last spotted about 20 metres from the shore.

    Bodies Of Drowned Teen Boy, Young Man Recovered From Popular Harrison Lake

    WATCH: Possible B.C. Meteorite Captured On Surveillance Videos, Police Flooded With Calls

    WATCH:  Possible B.C. Meteorite Captured On Surveillance Videos, Police Flooded With Calls
    Police Received Calls From Nelson, The Okanagan, The Comox Valley And As Far As Calgary To The East.

    WATCH: Possible B.C. Meteorite Captured On Surveillance Videos, Police Flooded With Calls

    RCMP Is Ready For Back To School. Are You?

    RCMP Is Ready For Back To School. Are You?
    Drivers should also keep in mind that excessive speeding in a school zone (70 km/hr in a 30 km/hr zone) will lead to their vehicle being impounded for 7 days as per the legislation.

    RCMP Is Ready For Back To School. Are You?

    18-Yr-Old Sehajdeep Sidhu Identified As Victim Of Abbotsford Shooting, 2 Others Injured

    18-Yr-Old Sehajdeep Sidhu Identified As Victim Of Abbotsford Shooting, 2 Others Injured
    The victim of a gang-related targeted shooting in Abbotsford has been identified as 18-year-old Sehajdeep Sidhu. he did not have a criminal record but was known to police

    18-Yr-Old Sehajdeep Sidhu Identified As Victim Of Abbotsford Shooting, 2 Others Injured

    British Columbia Ditches Tuition Fees For Former Kids In Care Aged 19 To 26

    British Columbia Ditches Tuition Fees For Former Kids In Care Aged 19 To 26
    NANAIMO, B.C. — Premier John Horgan says British Columbia has waived tuition at all 25 of its post-secondary institutions for former youth in care to give them a chance to succeed.

    British Columbia Ditches Tuition Fees For Former Kids In Care Aged 19 To 26

    Officials Urge People To Avoid Backcountry In Southern B.C. To Prevent Wildfires

    Officials Urge People To Avoid Backcountry In Southern B.C. To Prevent Wildfires
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Officials are asking people to stay out of B.C.'s backcountry and recreation sites over the Labour Day weekend as the wildfire danger for the southern half of the province remains extreme.

    Officials Urge People To Avoid Backcountry In Southern B.C. To Prevent Wildfires