Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Government Pulls Environmental Certificate For Controversial Jumbo Glacier Resort

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2015 11:09 AM
  • B.C. Government Pulls Environmental Certificate For Controversial Jumbo Glacier Resort
VANCOUVER — Developers of a controversial billion-dollar ski resort that has been decades in the making will have "to start from scratch," said British Columbia's environment minister.
 
The provincial government announced Thursday that the environmental assessment certificate for Jumbo Glacier Resort had expired.
 
The resort, which has been repeatedly challenged in court by First Nations and environmental groups, received its first environmental certificate in 2004.
 
The certificate was extended in 2009, with an expiry date of Oct. 12, 2014, but the extension document stated all approved projects must be "substantially started" under provincial law within the time limit set out, something that Environment Minister Mary Polak said just hasn't happened. 
 
"In making my decision, I had focused on the physical activities that had taken place at the project site," said Polak. "While it is clear that some construction has started, I was not convinced that the physical activity undertaken as of Oct. 12, 2014, meets the threshold of a substantially started project."
 
Resort spokesman Tommaso Oberti, vice-president of the Pheidias Group, said in an emailed statement that directors are reviewing the minister's decision but can take a number of courses of action. 
 
"Jumbo Glacier Resort would be the premier ski destination on the continent, and the recent poor winter showed us why, in the age of global warming, new ski resorts should be built at appropriate elevations and in the right climate zones," he said.
 
A document listing Polak's reasons stated the developers had undertaken nine projects on the site as of Oct. 12, 2014.
 
They included a slab and foundation preparations on the day lodge, a slab on the service building, foundation anchors for the quad chairlift, and temporary and permanent bridges on a forest service road. Workers also drilled and tested a well for potable water and improved about four kilometres of the service road.
 
When built out, the resort's base would have been 104 hectares in size, boasted a hotel with 6,250 "bed units," as well as condominiums and related amenities, the document stated.
 
"They don't posses a certificate, whether or not the project is dead is a matter of whether or not the proponents decide to start over again in the process," said Polak. "I mean that's an option open to them. That's not a decision for me to make at this point."
 
She said developers would have "to start from scratch."
 
Polak said B.C. ministries responsible for communities, forests, lands and natural resources will now have to analyze their next step.
 
The B.C. government granted municipal status to Glacier Resorts in November 2012, appointing a three-member council and providing a quarter million dollars as a budget.
 
Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan said Jumbo was a bad idea from the beginning and he called on the government to stop spending money on a community without any residents.
 
"The good news today for the people of the Kootenays is Jumbo will remain wild. Now, the next step is let's not pretend there’s a town there because there isn't," Horgan said.
 
Joe Foy, of the environmental group Wilderness Committee, called the decision "great news," and said the government must now grant the area protected status so another proposal doesn't endanger wildlife. 
 
"We knew this project was already on thin ice," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Cash for Guns: Police Aim To Seize 500 Illegal Guns In Metro Vancouver With Cash Incentive

Cash for Guns: Police Aim To Seize 500 Illegal Guns In Metro Vancouver With Cash Incentive
VANCOUVER — Police, Crime Stoppers and the Canada Border Services Agency have joined forces to launch a "Cash for Guns" campaign in Metro Vancouver.

Cash for Guns: Police Aim To Seize 500 Illegal Guns In Metro Vancouver With Cash Incentive

Firearms Among Stolen Items Seized At Home Near Nanaimo, B.C.: Police

Firearms Among Stolen Items Seized At Home Near Nanaimo, B.C.: Police
NANAIMO, B.C. — Police in Nanaimo, B.C., say two people have been arrested after officers seized thousands of dollars worth of stolen property at a home in the community of Cedar. 

Firearms Among Stolen Items Seized At Home Near Nanaimo, B.C.: Police

All Travellers Needing Visas To Enter Canada To Undergo Biometric Screening Now

All Travellers Needing Visas To Enter Canada To Undergo Biometric Screening Now
OTTAWA — Canada is about to add another layer of security for travellers who need visas to enter the country — biometric screening.

All Travellers Needing Visas To Enter Canada To Undergo Biometric Screening Now

New Website Connects Abused Women To Shelters Across Canada

New Website Connects Abused Women To Shelters Across Canada
TORONTO — A new website aims to give women and children seeking shelter from domestic abuse a one-stop connection to help.

New Website Connects Abused Women To Shelters Across Canada

B.C. Woman Tracks Down Biological Dad Who Is An Elvis Impersonator In Thailand

B.C. Woman Tracks Down Biological Dad Who Is An Elvis Impersonator In Thailand
A Canadian woman says tracking down her biological father was always on her mind until a three-day social media campaign helped identify him as an Elvis impersonator working in Thailand.

B.C. Woman Tracks Down Biological Dad Who Is An Elvis Impersonator In Thailand

Questions Remain Unanswered As Murder Charge Laid Against Boy, 17, In Winnipeg School Stabbin

Questions Remain Unanswered As Murder Charge Laid Against Boy, 17, In Winnipeg School Stabbin
WINNIPEG — A 17-year-old boy has been charged with second-degree murder in a fatal stabbing at a Winnipeg high school.

Questions Remain Unanswered As Murder Charge Laid Against Boy, 17, In Winnipeg School Stabbin