Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court Dismisses Burnaby's Case Against Trans Mountain Pipeline

The Canadian Press, 23 Aug, 2018 12:36 PM
    The Alberta government is "batting a thousand" when it comes to fighting for the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, Premier Rachel Notley said Thursday, after the Supreme Court of Canada dismissed an appeal by the City of Burnaby on construction of the controversial line.
     
     
    "When the B.C. government tried to overstep its legal and constitutional authority, we took bold action – and they backed down," she said in a social media post.
     
     
    "When the City of Burnaby tried to block the Trans Mountain Pipeline in court, we intervened – and we won in court and we won again today."
     
     
    Notley said the courts have made 17 straight rulings in favour of Trans Mountain.
     
     
    The Burnaby appeal was one of the last remaining court challenges being fought by opponents to a project that has pitted British Columbia and First Nations against Alberta and Ottawa.
     
     
    Several B.C. First Nations are involved in a Federal Court of Appeal case expected to be decided soon that targets Ottawa's approval of the project.
     
     
    Burnaby asked the country's highest court last spring to consider overturning a lower court decision that denied the port city leave to appeal a ruling by the National Energy Board.
     
     
    That ruling allowed Kinder Morgan to bypass local bylaws during construction of the pipeline expansion, which would triple the amount of diluted bitumen and other oil products moving between the Edmonton-area and port facilities in Burnaby.
     
     
    The federal government approved the pipeline expansion in 2016, but the project faces significant opposition in B.C.
     
     
    Burnaby had appealed the NEB’s decision to the Federal Court of Appeal, which dismissed the appeal with costs on March 23.
     
     
    Earlier this week, protesters outside a cabinet retreat in Nanaimo, B.C., accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of fiddling "while B.C. burns," referring to the province's raging wildfires that some have attributed to climate change.
     
     
    The cabinet met with B.C.'s NDP premier, John Horgan, who reiterated his government's staunch opposition to the pipeline expansion project, which he said would result in a seven-fold increase in tanker traffic off B.C.'s coast and, thus, increase the chances of a "catastrophic spill."
     
     
    In May, Trudeau's Liberals announced a decision to buy the Trans Mountain pipeline from Alberta to the B.C. coast and related infrastructure for $4.5 billion. The government has also committed to spend billions more to build the controversial expansion.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver, Victoria Shorelines Littered With Cigarette Butts, Researchers

    VICTORIA — A study analyzing data from volunteer shoreline cleanups in British Columbia says cigarettes and filters from them account for almost 50 per cent of the waste collected in Vancouver and Victoria.

    Vancouver, Victoria Shorelines Littered With Cigarette Butts, Researchers

    RCMP Investigating After German Tourist Shot In Head While Driving With Family On Alberta Highway

    RCMP Investigating After German Tourist Shot In Head While Driving With Family On Alberta Highway
    MORLEY, Alta. — Mounties in southern Alberta are investigating a possible road rage attack after a German tourist was shot in the head while driving on a highway.

    RCMP Investigating After German Tourist Shot In Head While Driving With Family On Alberta Highway

    The Of Man Who Fell From B.C. Houseboat Found In Washington State

    The Of Man Who Fell From B.C. Houseboat Found In Washington State
    The body of a man who fell off a houseboat in Delta, B.C., in April has been found on a beach in Washington state.

    The Of Man Who Fell From B.C. Houseboat Found In Washington State

    Guest Column: Racism, Hate, Crime, Violence Has Increased Exponentially In Canada

    Guest Column: Racism, Hate, Crime, Violence Has Increased Exponentially In Canada
    An Indian-origin couple in Canada’s Hamilton city were subjected to racist abuse by a man on Saturday, in the parking lot of the Walmart Super center in the city. Dale Robertson, 47, told the couple to go back to their country and threatened to kill their children

    Guest Column: Racism, Hate, Crime, Violence Has Increased Exponentially In Canada

    Veterinarian Warns Dog Owners On Cannabis Risks, Saying Cases Come In Weekly

    Veterinarian Warns Dog Owners On Cannabis Risks, Saying Cases Come In Weekly
     A veterinarian is warning dog owners to be careful with cannabis, saying her clinic is treating about one dog per week for marijuana toxicity.

    Veterinarian Warns Dog Owners On Cannabis Risks, Saying Cases Come In Weekly

    Harassment Complaint Made Against University Women's Hockey Coach In Alberta

    Harassment Complaint Made Against University Women's Hockey Coach In Alberta
     The head coach of the University of Lethbridge women's hockey team is to receive more training after the school investigated a formal harassment complaint filed by six of her players.

    Harassment Complaint Made Against University Women's Hockey Coach In Alberta