Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Site C Was Tough Decision, Now It's Time To Make Best Use Of Project: Minister

The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2017 12:30 PM
    VICTORIA — He was one of staunchest critics of the Site C dam, but George Heyman found himself in the uncomfortable position this week of supporting a plan to complete the $10.7 billion megaproject.
     
     
    A couple of days after the decision was announced, B.C.'s environment minister said the previous Liberal government left the NDP no choice but to keep building.
     
     
    "I'm obviously not going to talk about cabinet discussions, but I certainly never felt held down with a pistol to my head," he said in an interview earlier this week.
     
     
    "This was not a decision we made lightly or took any pleasure in making. This clearly was not a project we thought was a good one."
     
     
    Heyman, a former executive director of the Sierra Club and president of the B.C. Government Service Employees Union, has consistently raised environmental and economic concerns about Site C.
     
     
    Heyman and Energy Minister Michelle Mungall stood at Premier John Horgan's side for the announcement on Monday. Horgan said it was a gut-wrenching experience, adding that the ashen faces of the three politicians aptly portrayed their emotions.
     
     
    "As the premier said to us, we've made a collective decision that we're supporting it, but that doesn't mean you have to not show your feelings or emotions or your disappointment," said Heyman. "He said, 'I'm doing that and I expect others will too.' "
     
     
     
     
    Horgan said the government had no alternative but complete the hydroelectric dam rather than absorb a $4 billion hit to its bottom line. Cancelling Site C would have jeopardized government plans for more schools, hospitals and bridges, he said.
     
     
    Agriculture Minister Lana Popham said in a Facebook post Tuesday the past few weeks were the most difficult of her career.
     
     
    "I am with so many of you in grieving the loss of agricultural land in the flood zone of Site C," she wrote.
     
     
    Heyman said the government must now find ways to make the best of the situation.
     
     
    "We're not going to simply build it and let it go to waste," he said.
     
     
    There are climate challenges ahead that will involve a lot of electrification of industry, he said.
     
     
    "The challenge for me and I think all of us is to take this project and find a way to shoe horn it into that plan."
     
     
    Horgan agreed, saying the government must incorporate Site C into its climate objectives.
     
     
    "It now falls to us to make sure the project, now $10.7 billion, comes in on budget and provides an opportunity for us to do more with the energy that we would not have been able to do otherwise," he said in an interview this week.
     
     
    It will be the third dam on the Peace River in northeastern B.C., flooding an 83-kilometre stretch of valley near Fort St. John. It will provide enough power to light up to 450,000 homes a year.
     
     
    Horgan and Heyman both said the decision to go ahead opened wounds across B.C., including personal ones.
     
     
    "People have deep feelings about this," said Horgan, who admitted he and his wife argued about Site C. "I'm saddened many people, lifetime friends of mine, are disappointed with the decision I made."
     
     
    Heyman said: "I've had close friends tell me how disappointed they are in the decision."
     
     
    Others say they will continue to fight Site C. Landowners and environmentalists have asked the auditor general to examine the government's calculations that the province would incur $4 billion in costs to cancel the project. Indigenous groups have also promised court action, claiming infringement of treaty rights.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary Court Told Brothers Who Raped Teen 'Fell Through The Cracks Of Life'

    Calgary Court Told Brothers Who Raped Teen 'Fell Through The Cracks Of Life'
    CALGARY — A defence lawyer says the world has always been pitted against two brothers with fetal alcohol syndrome who repeatedly sexually assaulted a teenage girl they randomly abducted at a bus stop.

    Calgary Court Told Brothers Who Raped Teen 'Fell Through The Cracks Of Life'

    B.C. Experiments With 'Lego Block' Housing In Fight Against Homelessness

    B.C. Experiments With 'Lego Block' Housing In Fight Against Homelessness
    What could easily pass as a description of the children's toy Lego could also be a portrait of British Columbia's latest tool in the fight against homelessness.

    B.C. Experiments With 'Lego Block' Housing In Fight Against Homelessness

    Last Pedestrian Hurt In Edmonton Attack In Hospital Awaiting Surgery

    Last Pedestrian Hurt In Edmonton Attack In Hospital Awaiting Surgery
    EDMONTON — One of four pedestrians struck by a rental truck in a weekend attack in Edmonton remains in intensive care in hospital awaiting surgery.

    Last Pedestrian Hurt In Edmonton Attack In Hospital Awaiting Surgery

    Quebec Man Sues Provincial Police For $635,000 For Alleged Beating

    Quebec Man Sues Provincial Police For $635,000 For Alleged Beating
    MONTREAL — A man is suing Quebec's provincial police for $635,000 for an alleged beating that took place in a holding cell.

    Quebec Man Sues Provincial Police For $635,000 For Alleged Beating

    Ont. Man Who Sexually Abused Daughters, Nieces, Deemed Dangerous Offender

    Ont. Man Who Sexually Abused Daughters, Nieces, Deemed Dangerous Offender
    The man, who can only be identified as K.C., was deemed a dangerous offender, a lifetime designation that allows the court to impose a prison sentence with no end date.

    Ont. Man Who Sexually Abused Daughters, Nieces, Deemed Dangerous Offender

    Las Vegas Attack Leaves Costly Wake For Uninsured Canadian Victims

    Las Vegas Attack Leaves Costly Wake For Uninsured Canadian Victims
    CALGARY — Hudson Mack says he doesn't know the cost of his Victoria-based son's intensive medical care after being shot Sunday at the Route 91 Harvest music festival in Las Vegas, only that he's sure it's already "catastrophic."

    Las Vegas Attack Leaves Costly Wake For Uninsured Canadian Victims