Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Protests, Legal Challenges Planned To Block Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2019 08:51 PM

    VANCOUVER — Opponents of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion are preparing for a long summer of legal challenges and protests aimed at blocking the project from being built.


    Rueben George of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation says it will file a legal challenge in the Federal Court of Appeal and he is confident the First Nation will be successful after Ottawa approved the project on Tuesday.


    Squamish Nation Coun. Khelsilem says his band is also prepared for legal action and Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart says the city will join any lawsuits that are filed.


    Lawyer Eugene Kung says there are a number of legal arguments opponents could advance, including that it was impossible for the federal government to make an unbiased decision as the owner of the pipeline.


    But Eric Adams, a law professor at the University of Alberta, says the court may be uncomfortable setting a precedent that governments cannot approve projects they support.


    A 20-kilometre march is planned for Sunday from Victoria to the Saanich peninsula in solidarity with First Nations that are opposed to the project.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ben Chin, Morneau's Chief Of Staff, To Join PMO On Friday As Senior Adviser

    Ben Chin, Morneau's Chief Of Staff, To Join PMO On Friday As Senior Adviser
    OTTAWA — Finance Minister Bill Morneau's former chief of staff Ben Chin will start a new job as a senior adviser to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this week.  

    Ben Chin, Morneau's Chief Of Staff, To Join PMO On Friday As Senior Adviser

    Montreal Mayor Says Secularism Bill Targets Minorities And Violates Freedoms

    Quebec's secularism bill is causing tension in society and Montrealers feel powerless to do anything about it, Mayor Valerie Plante told committee members studying the controversial legislation Tuesday.

    Montreal Mayor Says Secularism Bill Targets Minorities And Violates Freedoms

    Appeal Court Says Doctors Have To Give Referrals For Services They Oppose

    Appeal Court Says Doctors Have To Give Referrals For Services They Oppose
    TORONTO — Ontario's highest court says doctors in the province must give referrals for medical services that clash with their moral or religious beliefs.

    Appeal Court Says Doctors Have To Give Referrals For Services They Oppose

    Accused In Death Of Winnipeg Woman Found In Barrel Controlled 5 Women: Crown

    WINNIPEG — A Crown prosecutor says a man on trial for first-degree murder maintained control over multiple women he lived with through surveillance, drugs and abuse.

    Accused In Death Of Winnipeg Woman Found In Barrel Controlled 5 Women: Crown

    37-Yr-Old Richmond, B.C., Woman Among Six Killed In Alaska Floatplane Crash

    KETCHIKAN, Alaska — A 37-year-old woman from Richmond, B.C., has been identified as the Canadian killed when two sightseeing floatplanes crashed midair in Alaska earlier this week.    

    37-Yr-Old Richmond, B.C., Woman Among Six Killed In Alaska Floatplane Crash

    Overdoses Down In B.C., But Toxic, Powerful Drug Is More Common: Coroner

    New figures released by British Columbia's coroners service suggest fewer people are dying from overdoses overall but an extremely powerful opioid is increasingly present in those fatalities.

    Overdoses Down In B.C., But Toxic, Powerful Drug Is More Common: Coroner