Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Former Dam Workers Say $9-billion Site C Project Should Be Union-built

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Apr, 2015 03:26 PM
  • Former Dam Workers Say $9-billion Site C Project Should Be Union-built
VICTORIA — Workers who built some of B.C.'s most iconic mega-projects are at the legislature pushing for a union-backed labour force on the $9-billion Site C hydroelectric dam near Fort St. John.
 
Jack Whittaker says he worked on the W.A.C. Bennett Dam near Hudson's Hope more than 50 years ago and that having union workers on Site C will get the project done on time and on budget.
 
Crown-owned BC Hydro says it plans to have union and non-union companies and workers at Site C.
 
Energy Minister Bill Bennett says he will meet Whittaker and others but will tell them that Site C will be built with a combined labour force.
 
Tom Sigurdson of the B.C. and Yukon Territory Building and Construction Trades Council says an open-shop site on Site C will create chaos and likely increase costs as companies compete for a limited pool of skilled workers.
 
Last month, Premier Christy Clark intervened to reverse BC Hydro's decision to switch to an open-shop format that would prohibit union organizing on the Site C project.

MORE National ARTICLES

Head of aboriginal women's group stepping down to seek Liberal nomination

Head of aboriginal women's group stepping down to seek Liberal nomination
OTTAWA - The president of the Native Women's Association of Canada will relinquish her post later this year as she seeks to run for the federal Liberals in the next election.

Head of aboriginal women's group stepping down to seek Liberal nomination

Competition Bureau calls for more regulation to cut wireless roaming rates

Competition Bureau calls for more regulation to cut wireless roaming rates
GATINEAU, Que. - Introducing a new national wireless carrier in Canada would result in lower consumer prices, but regulators need to do more than simply cap wholesale roaming rates to make that happen, the competition watchdog has told the country's telecom regulator.

Competition Bureau calls for more regulation to cut wireless roaming rates

Encana to buy Athlon Energy in US$7.1-billion deal, speed up shift to liquids

Encana to buy Athlon Energy in US$7.1-billion deal, speed up shift to liquids
CALGARY - Encana Corp. (TSX:ECA) has agreed to buy Athlon Energy in a US$7.1 billion friendly takeover deal that will give the Canadian gas producer access to a major Texas oil play and speed up its shift towards more liquids production.

Encana to buy Athlon Energy in US$7.1-billion deal, speed up shift to liquids

NDP launch new bid to improve question period by giving Speaker more power

NDP launch new bid to improve question period by giving Speaker more power
OTTAWA - The New Democrats are seeking to get more out of question period by giving the Speaker more power to make sure Canadians get answers.

NDP launch new bid to improve question period by giving Speaker more power

Missing 2-year-old girl found in soutwestern Ontario

Missing 2-year-old girl found in soutwestern Ontario
NORWICH, Ont. - Provincial police say a two-year-old girl who was reported missing Sunday night in a rural area of southwestern Ontario has been found.

Missing 2-year-old girl found in soutwestern Ontario

Coroner's inquest into suicide could peel back curtain on B.C. deportations

Coroner's inquest into suicide could peel back curtain on B.C. deportations
VANCOUVER - A coroner's inquest starting Monday into the death of a Mexican national who hanged herself inside a Vancouver airport holding cell offers a rare chance to examine the secretive deportation process encountered by many migrants, says an advocacy group with ties to Lucia Vega Jimenez's family.

Coroner's inquest into suicide could peel back curtain on B.C. deportations