Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. First Nations Lawyer Says Crown Didn't Consult On Specific Site C Permits

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Aug, 2015 12:05 PM
  • B.C. First Nations Lawyer Says Crown Didn't Consult On Specific Site C Permits
VANCOUVER — A pair of First Nations in northeastern British Columbia want a judge to issue a stop-work order on the first phase of construction for the Site C hydroelectric dam.
 
The Prophet River First Nation and the West Moberly First Nation say the provincial government failed to consult them on specific permits for the nearly $9-billion project.
 
Their lawyer, John Gailus, is arguing against several permits granted to BC Hydro in an injunction application affecting members of the Treaty 8 Tribal Association.
 
Gailus says the permits allow clearcutting and the removal of beaver dams, eagle nests and archeological sites.
 
He says the First Nations will suffer irreparable harm if the injunction is not granted and that there's no urgency to immediately proceed with the project.
 
The province granted approval in early July for the first of seven phases of construction to begin on the dam on the Peace River, near Fort St. John.

MORE National ARTICLES

Tom Mulcair Jumps Election Starting Gun, Launches Campaign-Style Tour Of Ontario

The NDP leader is launching an eight-day tour on Monday designed to showcase his team, his policies and his party's momentum in the province.

Tom Mulcair Jumps Election Starting Gun, Launches Campaign-Style Tour Of Ontario

Little-Known Ontario Company Supplies World Museums With Dinosaur Skeletons

Little-Known Ontario Company Supplies World Museums With Dinosaur Skeletons
The call for a paleontology technician at the Royal Ontario Museum didn't initially seem like a fit for a steel company employee who hadn't shown the slightest interest in raptors as a child.

Little-Known Ontario Company Supplies World Museums With Dinosaur Skeletons

Surge In Ticket Sales A Sign That Toronto Embracing Pam Am Games: Organizers

Surge In Ticket Sales A Sign That Toronto Embracing Pam Am Games: Organizers
TORONTO — More than one million Pan Am Games tickets have now been sold, a milestone organizers say reflects the event's growing popularity.

Surge In Ticket Sales A Sign That Toronto Embracing Pam Am Games: Organizers

Vancouver Police Arrest Man Seen By Citizens' Group Fleeing Park After Murder

Vancouver Police Arrest Man Seen By Citizens' Group Fleeing Park After Murder
Police say the suspect is 26-year-old Matthew Brenner of Vancouver and he has been charged with second-degree murder after they found a body in Andy Livingstone Park near Expo Boulevard and Carrall Street

Vancouver Police Arrest Man Seen By Citizens' Group Fleeing Park After Murder

Police Shoot And Kill Suicidal Man In South Surrey, Independent Investigation Office Of B.C. Probing

Police Shoot And Kill Suicidal Man In South Surrey, Independent Investigation Office Of B.C. Probing
At approximately 2:30 a.m. on Saturday July 18, 2015, Surrey RCMP responded to reports of a suicidal male screaming just outside of the Surrey RCMP District 5 South Surrey office located in the 1800 block of 152nd Street. 

Police Shoot And Kill Suicidal Man In South Surrey, Independent Investigation Office Of B.C. Probing

Baby Girl In Quebec Shaken-Baby Case Dies; Father May Face Additional Charges

Baby Girl In Quebec Shaken-Baby Case Dies; Father May Face Additional Charges
GATINEAU, Que. — Police say a two-month-old baby who was fighting for her life in an Ottawa hospital after allegedly being shaken by her father has died.

Baby Girl In Quebec Shaken-Baby Case Dies; Father May Face Additional Charges