Monday, May 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pipeline Survey Crews Wrap Early In Disputed Zone At Centre Of Protests, Arrests

The Canadian Press , 28 Nov, 2014 09:13 PM
    BURNABY, B.C. — Kinder Morgan is pulling its equipment out early from Burnaby Mountain — the area at the centre of anti-pipeline protests in Metro Vancouver.
     
    Lisa Clement, with Trans Mountain media relations, said much of the equipment must be removed by helicopter, so crews wrapped up survey work early to meet a court-ordered deadline of Sunday night.
     
    Clement said crews finished one of two drilling holes that had been planned, going down 150 metres. The survey work will give the company enough information to present to the National Energy Board for a decision on the pipeline expansion, she said.
     
    "We have samples which we can provide photos of and it shows the different types of rock that goes that deep. So far, from early feasibility, it appears to be a stable area to put the pipeline."
     
    On Thursday, a B.C. Supreme Court judge refused to extend a court injunction against protesters for another 12 days, forcing Kinder Morgan to pack up before it completed its work.
     
    The company also admitted to the court that it provided incorrect GPS co-ordinates when it initially sought the injunction, prompting the judge to throw out civil contempt charges against dozens of activists who had been protesting the survey work.
     
    The growing protest camp on Burnaby Mountain, which is also home to a conservation site and Simon Fraser University, forced the company to go to court to ask for the injunction.
     
    Clement said crews will need clear weather, favourable winds and daylight to remove the remaining equipment. She said Friday that she thinks all equipment will be removed from the site on time.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Clamouring for new mollusk: researchers say new species one-of-a-kind find

    Clamouring for new mollusk: researchers say new species one-of-a-kind find
    VICTORIA — Ten years after an unusually scalloped clam was dragged up from the ocean floor off northern Vancouver Island, the tiny mollusk is making waves in the research world.

    Clamouring for new mollusk: researchers say new species one-of-a-kind find

    Jian Ghomeshi will plead not guilty to sexual assault charges: Lawyer

    Jian Ghomeshi will plead not guilty to sexual assault charges: Lawyer
    TORONTO — A sombre Jian Ghomeshi stood silently by his lawyer on Wednesday as she told a large crowd of reporters at a Toronto courthouse that the former CBC Radio host would plead not guilty to multiple counts of sexual assault.

    Jian Ghomeshi will plead not guilty to sexual assault charges: Lawyer

    'Curious' Workers Fired For Sneaking Looks At 112 Private E-Health Records

    'Curious' Workers Fired For Sneaking Looks At 112 Private E-Health Records
    VICTORIA — Vancouver Island's health authority has fired two employees it says peaked at patients' private health files to satisfy their personal curiosity.

    'Curious' Workers Fired For Sneaking Looks At 112 Private E-Health Records

    CBC, NHL websites briefly affected by Syrian Electronic Army hack

    CBC, NHL websites briefly affected by Syrian Electronic Army hack
    TORONTO — A group of politically motivated hackers operating under the name the Syrian Electronic Army briefly defaced the websites of the CBC, the NHL and a number of other prominent news outlets on Thursday.

    CBC, NHL websites briefly affected by Syrian Electronic Army hack

    Liberals Use Legislature To Set Stage For LNG, But Still No Deals

    Liberals Use Legislature To Set Stage For LNG, But Still No Deals
    VICTORIA — The stage has been set for the development of a liquefied natural gas industry by British Columbia's Liberal government, even though the first of what it says are 18 potential deals has yet to come to fruition.

    Liberals Use Legislature To Set Stage For LNG, But Still No Deals

    Advocates for sexual assault victims encouraged by Ghomeshi charges

    Advocates for sexual assault victims encouraged by Ghomeshi charges
    TORONTO — The sexual assault charges filed against former CBC Radio host Jian Ghomeshi offer tentative hope to those who fear their claims will be dismissed by an indifferent law enforcement system, victims' advocates said Wednesday.

    Advocates for sexual assault victims encouraged by Ghomeshi charges