Thursday, March 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Files Second Legal Challenge Against Alberta Over Turn-Off-Taps Law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2019 08:44 PM

    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government has filed a second lawsuit against Alberta over its turn-off-the-taps legislation.


    A statement of claim filed in Federal Court on June 14 is similar to a document filed last month in Alberta's Court of Queen's Bench that alleges Alberta introduced the bill to inflict economic pain on B.C. by limiting the supply of petroleum products to the province.


    The claim says Alberta's attorney general brought an application to have the action dismissed in the Court of Queen's Bench on the grounds that B.C. has no standing to challenge laws created in the Alberta legislature and that the legal action is premature.


    The B.C. government says it believes the case can be heard in Alberta but if it is found not to have standing there, it wants the Federal Court to declare Alberta's Preserving Canada's Economic Prosperity Act unconstitutional.


    Alberta's former NDP government passed the bill but it wasn't proclaimed into law until after the United Conservative Party was elected earlier this year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Delta Police Issue Warning After Cyclist Injured In Tsawwassen

    Delta Police Issue Warning After Cyclist Injured In Tsawwassen
    On Friday, May 10 at approximately 9:30 p.m., a cyclist was struck at Highway 17 and 52nd Street in Tsawwassen.    

    Delta Police Issue Warning After Cyclist Injured In Tsawwassen

    B.C. Cabinet Minister Jinny Sims Denies Allegations Levelled By Former Employee

    Citizens’ Services Minister Jinny Sims is under fire for writing visa reference letters for foreign nationals on a security watch list that cite her role as a minister instead of as an MLA.

    B.C. Cabinet Minister Jinny Sims Denies Allegations Levelled By Former Employee

    Trudeau Offers Canadian Lumber, Steel To Help Rebuild Notre Dame Cathedral

    Not long after arriving in Paris, Trudeau visited Notre Dame alongside the cathedral's rector, Patrick Chauvet, and French Culture Minister Franck Riester.    

    Trudeau Offers Canadian Lumber, Steel To Help Rebuild Notre Dame Cathedral

    Federal Fire Officials Update Forecast For This Year's Wildfire Season

    Federal Fire Officials Update Forecast For This Year's Wildfire Season
    EDMONTON — Officials say the wildfire danger is already high to extreme in areas of Western Canada.

    Federal Fire Officials Update Forecast For This Year's Wildfire Season

    Scheer Says Trudeau Is A Hypocrite Who Is Using Climate Change As Distraction

    Environment Minister Catherine McKenna is pushing the motion partly to force the Conservatives to show their hand on their climate-change policy by voting yes or no on keeping Canada's existing international promises on reducing greenhouse-gas emissions.

    Scheer Says Trudeau Is A Hypocrite Who Is Using Climate Change As Distraction

    Man Faces Two New Charges Following 'Violent Struggle' At B.C. Home: Police

    Man Faces Two New Charges Following 'Violent Struggle' At B.C. Home: Police
    CENTRAL SAANICH, B.C. — A man accused of murder at a home in Central Saanich, B.C., where police found signs of a "violent struggle" is facing two additional charges of aggravated assault.    

    Man Faces Two New Charges Following 'Violent Struggle' At B.C. Home: Police