Tuesday, December 23, 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

    HSBC Bank Canada Reports Q4 Profit Lower Due To Low Interest Rates

    HSBC Bank Canada Reports Q4 Profit Lower Due To Low Interest Rates
    VANCOUVER — HSBC's Canadian subsidiary says its fourth-quarter profit was lower last year than in 2013 because of less income from consumer lending, higher operating expenses and a smaller share of profit from associated companies.

    HSBC Bank Canada Reports Q4 Profit Lower Due To Low Interest Rates

    Psychiatrist recommends man who beheaded bus passenger go to Winnipeg group home

    Psychiatrist recommends man who beheaded bus passenger go to Winnipeg group home
    WINNIPEG — The psychiatrist of a man who beheaded a fellow passenger aboard a Greyhound bus is recommending Vince Li be moved from a mental hospital to a community group home in Winnipeg.

    Psychiatrist recommends man who beheaded bus passenger go to Winnipeg group home

    Latest train derailment in Ontario shows new safety standards inadequate: TSB

    Latest train derailment in Ontario shows new safety standards inadequate: TSB
    TIMMINS, Ont. — Canada's transport investigator says a freight train derailment in northern Ontario earlier this month suggests new safety requirements for tank cars carrying flammable liquids are inadequate.

    Latest train derailment in Ontario shows new safety standards inadequate: TSB

    Bill's terrorist propaganda provisions overly broad: law professors

    Bill's terrorist propaganda provisions overly broad: law professors
    OTTAWA — A new analysis says a federal proposal to scrub terrorist propaganda from the Internet risks sweeping in too much speech that has no ties to violent threats.

    Bill's terrorist propaganda provisions overly broad: law professors

    Body Found In Richmond, Homicide Investigators Called To Scene

    Body Found In Richmond, Homicide Investigators Called To Scene
    RICHMOND, B.C. — A body has been discovered in Richmond, B.C., and an investigation is underway. Mounties say the body was found at about 6 a.m. Monday.

    Body Found In Richmond, Homicide Investigators Called To Scene

    Mohamed Fahmy voices frustration as retrial postponed to next month

    Mohamed Fahmy voices frustration as retrial postponed to next month
    CAIRO — A Canadian journalist who had been imprisoned for more than a year in Egypt expressed frustration Monday as his retrial on widely-denounced terror-related charges was postponed to next month.

    Mohamed Fahmy voices frustration as retrial postponed to next month