Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Simon Fraser University Professors Receive Award For Pipeline Battle

The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2015 11:37 AM
  • Simon Fraser University Professors Receive Award For Pipeline Battle
VANCOUVER — Two professors at Simon Fraser University will be honoured for their work fighting oil pipelines.
 
The university has announced Stephen Collis and Lynne Quarmby are the 2015 recipients of SFU's Nora and Ted Sterling Prize in Support of Controversy.
 
Collis, a professor in the English department and Quarmby, a professor in Molecular Biology and Chemistry, will be presented with the award at a ceremony in Vancouver next Tuesday.
 
The two were among five people named by Kinder Morgan in a civil suit after protesters were arrested at Burnaby Mountain last fall against the company's exploratory work for its Trans-Mountain pipeline expansion.
 
Kinder Morgan has now dropped the suit and Collis has said it's proof the protests forced the company to change its approach.
 
He says it's a great honour to receive the award because it recognizes the importance of public actions.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police Officer's Role In Premier Paul Davis Ad Raises Questions Of Rights, Restrictions

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — The uproar this week over a police inspector's role in an online video endorsing the Newfoundland and Labrador premier is raising questions about rights and acceptable restrictions.

Police Officer's Role In Premier Paul Davis Ad Raises Questions Of Rights, Restrictions

Supreme Court Dismisses Chevron Appeal In Ecuador Environmental Damages Case

Supreme Court Dismisses Chevron Appeal In Ecuador Environmental Damages Case
The 7-0 ruling allows the case to proceed in Canada, but it makes no finding on the merits of the long-running legal saga that has played out in courtrooms across the Western Hemisphere.

Supreme Court Dismisses Chevron Appeal In Ecuador Environmental Damages Case

Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors

Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors
International photojournalist Daniella Zalcman has partnered with The New Yorker magazine to show her project on Canada's residential school survivors.

Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors

Manitoba Government Adds Support Money For Syrian Refugees

Premier Greg Selinger says an extra $40,000 is being given to settlement service providers in the province, so that they can accommodate hundreds more refugees in the coming months.

Manitoba Government Adds Support Money For Syrian Refugees

First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party

First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party
Wildrose Leader Brian Jean, a former Conservative MP under Harper, told party supporters to take a short breather before getting back to the campaign grind.

First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party

Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal

Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal
WHITEHORSE — A Conservative federal election candidate in Yukon donned in camouflage gear emerged from the bush on a dark, rainy night to catch someone vandalizing his campaign signs.

Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal