Sunday, May 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Clayoquot Sound Activists Head To B.C. Pipeline Protest Site To Be Arrested

The Canadian Press , 26 Nov, 2014 12:01 PM
    BURNABY, B.C. — Activists who were part of the Clayoquot (clah-CWOT) Sound anti-logging protests in British Columbia in the early 1990s say they plan to be arrested at an anti-pipeline protest near Vancouver.
     
    Kinder Morgan's plans to expand its Trans Mountain pipeline have become the focus for anti-pipeline protests, and at least 90 people have been arrested since last week for violating a court injunction.
     
    More than 800 people were arrested during a blockade of logging trucks into Clayoquot Sound, on Vancouver Island, in a summer of protests dubbed the War in the Woods.
     
    Valerie Langer, who was an organizer with Friends of Clayoquot Sound at the time, says she and two other women who were involved in the movement will be on Burnaby Mountain today.
     
    Langer says the trio plans to cross the police line and refuse to move, which she expects will end in her arrest.
     
    She says the Kinder Morgan survey work has become a breaking point for pipeline opponents, who feel they have been failed by regulators and the courts.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ferguson Ruling Sparks Protest In Toronto

    Ferguson Ruling Sparks Protest In Toronto
    TORONTO - Thousands braved freezing temperatures in Toronto on Tuesday night to hold a vigil for Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager slain by a white police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in August.

    Ferguson Ruling Sparks Protest In Toronto

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info
    TORONTO - The Canada Revenue Agency confirmed late Tuesday that it has accidentally disclosed confidential taxpayer information to the CBC. 

    CRA 'Accidentally' Gives CBC Tax Info

    B.C. Government Gives Environmental Green Light To Three LNG Projects

    B.C. Government Gives Environmental Green Light To Three LNG Projects
    VICTORIA — Three proposed multibillion-dollar liquefied natural gas projects in northern B.C. have been awarded the environmental green light by the provincial government.

    B.C. Government Gives Environmental Green Light To Three LNG Projects

    Alaska's construction of B.C. ferry terminal falls under Buy America policy

    Alaska's construction of B.C. ferry terminal falls under Buy America policy
    PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. — Construction of the Prince Rupert ferry terminal on British Columbia's West Coast has become tangled in Buy America provisions, meaning the facility that sits on Canadian Crown land must be built with U.S. iron and steel.  

    Alaska's construction of B.C. ferry terminal falls under Buy America policy

    Auditor General Considers B.C. Health Probe

    Auditor General Considers B.C. Health Probe
     VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general is considering launching a second review of the firings of eight health researchers after a former deputy minister accused the Liberal government of attempting to make him a scapegoat.

    Auditor General Considers B.C. Health Probe

    Richmond Man Admits Smuggling Rhino Horns, Elephant Ivory Into Canada

    Richmond Man Admits Smuggling Rhino Horns, Elephant Ivory Into Canada
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver-area antiques dealer has pleaded guilty in an American court to attempting to import endangered rhinoceros horns into Canada in a smuggling operation that also saw carved elephant tusks and other items illegally transported across the border.

    Richmond Man Admits Smuggling Rhino Horns, Elephant Ivory Into Canada