Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

First Nations End Protest At B.C. Premier's Office, Say Biowaste Talks Planned

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Apr, 2015 12:31 PM
    WEST KELOWNA, B.C. — First Nations' leaders say the occupation of Premier Christy Clark's constituency office is over because the government has agreed to talk about the spread of treated human waste on private and public lands in B.C.'s Nicola Valley.
     
    Four chiefs and a representative of a fifth chief began their sit-in of Clark's West Kelowna office on April 15.
     
    At the time, Chief Aaron Sam of the Lower Nicola Indian Band said leaders had met Environment Minister Mary Polak twice and asked her to disclose where the waste was being spread, but the government only provided a partial list.
     
    The leaders said they were worried about impacts on land, water, traditional foods and health and noted the government is legally obligated to consult with aboriginals.
     
    But the chiefs issued a news release late Monday afternoon, saying the government has committed to a high-level meeting to resolve their ongoing concerns about biowaste operations.
     
    The company contracted to spread the waste, BioCentral, has said that biosolids are used around the world to rejuvenate soil, and it had all the required permits, licences and permissions.
     
    "It is time to move forward with resolving this issue on a government-to-government basis," Coldwater Indian Band Chief Lee Spahan said in a release. 
     
    "We are ending our occupation today on the expectation that the province will come tomorrow prepared to sit down and engage with us in a respectful process that properly addresses our concerns."
     
    The leaders say they want the province to collaborate on a process to gather and share information about biowaste, manage and address impacts, and protect lands and wildlife in the valley.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion
    OTTAWA — How to avoid missile batteries and navigate defensive radar systems in Syria are among the issues preoccupying military planners as Parliament debates the merits of expanding and extending Canada's Middle East mission.

    Avoiding Syrian Air Defences A Concern As Commons Set To Approve War Expansion

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games
    TORONTO — In their effort to fight congestion during this summer's Pan Am and Parapan Am Games, organizers in Ontario are taking cues from those who have been there, done that.

    Vancouver Shares Olympic Lessons With Toronto Ahead Of Pan Am Games

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously
    Ken Dryden sits in a classroom at McGill University in Montreal ready to talk to students about the future. His face beams into four other classrooms across the country.

    Ken Dryden Teaches Class Of The Future To Five Universities Simultaneously

    Burnaby RCMP Shoot, Kill Man After Responding To Double-stabbing Incident

    Burnaby RCMP Shoot, Kill Man After Responding To Double-stabbing Incident
    Burnaby RCMP say they responded to reports of a double stabbing (on the 6100 block of 14th Avenue) shortly before 6 a.m. Sunday.

    Burnaby RCMP Shoot, Kill Man After Responding To Double-stabbing Incident

    Wintry Weekend Expected For Atlantic Canada, Warnings Issued For Newfoundland

    Wintry Weekend Expected For Atlantic Canada, Warnings Issued For Newfoundland
    HALIFAX — Environment Canada says parts of the Atlantic region are in for another dose of winter weather this weekend.

    Wintry Weekend Expected For Atlantic Canada, Warnings Issued For Newfoundland

    Harper's Anti-Niqab Rhetoric Helps Terrorist Recruiters: Philosopher Taylor

    Harper's Anti-Niqab Rhetoric Helps Terrorist Recruiters: Philosopher Taylor
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper was accused Saturday of playing into the hands of terrorist recruiters with inflammatory comments about the face-covering veil worn by some Muslim women.

    Harper's Anti-Niqab Rhetoric Helps Terrorist Recruiters: Philosopher Taylor