Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Landowner Group In Court To Challenge Province's Approval Of Site C Dam In B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Apr, 2015 11:57 AM
    VANCOUVER — A group of landowners in northeastern B.C. says the provincial government broke the law in approving the controversial Site C dam.
     
    The Peace Valley Landowners Association has told B.C. Supreme Court that the province ignored a joint review panel's recommendations for the proposed megaproject.
     
    The association wants the court to quash an environmental assessment certificate that B.C. issued for the dam last fall, arguing the province failed to follow the assessment process.
     
    The case is the first of seven legal challenges against the provincial and federal governments from various groups opposed to Site C.
     
    Two weeks ago, Energy Minister Bill Bennett told a Vancouver Board of Trade gathering that shovels would be in the ground by summer.
     
    An estimated 5,500 hectares of land would be flooded by the dam's construction.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Hospital Says Recent Traveller To West Africa Doesn't Have Ebola

    Toronto Hospital Says Recent Traveller To West Africa Doesn't Have Ebola
    TORONTO — A person who recently travelled in West Africa has tested negative for Ebola after being assessed in a Toronto hospital.

    Toronto Hospital Says Recent Traveller To West Africa Doesn't Have Ebola

    CRTC To Require Cable, Satellite Companies To Offer Basic Package, With $25 Cap

    CRTC To Require Cable, Satellite Companies To Offer Basic Package, With $25 Cap
    GATINEAU, Que. — The country's broadcast regulator is coming out with new rules today that will require cable and satellite companies to offer customers a trimmed-down, basic channels package, sources have told The Canadian Press.

    CRTC To Require Cable, Satellite Companies To Offer Basic Package, With $25 Cap

    Supreme Court Rules Quebec Infringed On School's Religious Freedom

    Supreme Court Rules Quebec Infringed On School's Religious Freedom
    OTTAWA — A divided Supreme Court of Canada disagreed over the subtleties, but in the end upheld the religious freedom of a historic Montreal Jesuit school to teach Catholicism in the way it chooses.

    Supreme Court Rules Quebec Infringed On School's Religious Freedom

    ISIL A Threat That Must Be Checked: Canada

    ISIL A Threat That Must Be Checked: Canada
    OTTAWA — Canada wants to expand its mission against Islamic militants in Iraq and Syria because they pose a continuing threat that will grow if it's not checked, Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson said Thursday.

    ISIL A Threat That Must Be Checked: Canada

    Social Media Contributes To Winter Negativity

    Social Media Contributes To Winter Negativity
    HALIFAX — People in storm-battered Atlantic Canada might be fixated on winter, but a psychology professor says tweeting about it isn't the best way to blow off steam.

    Social Media Contributes To Winter Negativity

    Judge Denies Kamloops Man's Plea To Have Seized Marijuana Plants Returned

    Judge Denies Kamloops Man's Plea To Have Seized Marijuana Plants Returned
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A provincial court judge has denied a Kamloops, B.C., man's application to be reunited with 10 medical marijuana plants that were seized by RCMP last summer.

    Judge Denies Kamloops Man's Plea To Have Seized Marijuana Plants Returned