Thursday, May 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trans Mountain Pipeline Won't Cause Tension With Notley At Meeting: John Horgan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 May, 2018 03:41 PM
    LANGFORD, B.C. — The premiers of British Columbia and Alberta will join their counterparts from Western Canada at a meeting next week, but John Horgan doesn't expect any drama over the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.
     
     
    Horgan says proposals will be made about a national pharmacare program because the provinces have always led the way on cost savings for prescription drugs and he wants B.C. to be at the forefront of the issue.
     
     
    While acknowledging he and Alberta's Rachel Notley have differences on the pipeline, he says they are in agreement on a number of other matters and they have been friends for 20 years.
     
     
    On Thursday, British Columbia announced plans to launch a lawsuit over new Alberta legislation that could restrict fuel exports to the West Coast.
     
     
    B.C. Attorney General David Eby said his province will ask the Court of Queen's Bench in Alberta to declare the legislation unconstitutional on the grounds that one province cannot punish another.
     
     
    Plans to triple capacity along Kinder Morgan's existing Trans Mountain pipeline from Edmonton to Burnaby have pitted Alberta and the federal government against B.C.'s government, which says the risk of a spill is too great for the province's environment and economy.
     
     
    B.C. filed a reference case in the province's Court of Appeal last month to determine if it has jurisdiction to regulate heavy oil shipments. It also joined two other lawsuits launched by Indigenous groups opposed to the $7.4-billion project.
     
     
    Kinder Morgan has ceased all non-essential spending on the project until it receives assurances it can proceed on the Trans Mountain expansion project without delays, setting a May 31 deadline on getting those guarantees.
     
     
    Finance Minister Bill Morneau said Wednesday the federal government is prepared to offer an "indemnity" to help ease the political risks for any investors to ensure the pipeline expansion can proceed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Survivor Of Gun Violence In Afghanistan Says She Wants To Be 'Voice Of Women'

    Survivor Of Gun Violence In Afghanistan Says She Wants To Be 'Voice Of Women'
    A bullet from a rifle she said was fired by her husband shattered her cheek bone, collapsed her eye socket and took half her nose with it.

    Survivor Of Gun Violence In Afghanistan Says She Wants To Be 'Voice Of Women'

    Owners Of Multimillion Dollar Vancouver Home Owners Say They Can't Stomach Tax Bump

    Owners Of Multimillion Dollar Vancouver Home Owners Say They Can't Stomach Tax Bump
    VANCOUVER — Lynne Kent says owning a home in Vancouver that's valued at $4 million isn't the blessing it may appear to be.

    Owners Of Multimillion Dollar Vancouver Home Owners Say They Can't Stomach Tax Bump

    Southern B.C. Bracing For Round 2 Of Flooding As Snowpacks Melt

    Southern B.C. Bracing For Round 2 Of Flooding As Snowpacks Melt
    GRAND FORKS, B.C. — Flood weary residents in southern British Columbia are being told to brace for round two as rising temperatures accelerate the melting of high elevation snowpacks. 

    Southern B.C. Bracing For Round 2 Of Flooding As Snowpacks Melt

    No One On Watch As Track Worker Injured At Delta, B.C., Rail Yard: TSB

    No One On Watch As Track Worker Injured At Delta, B.C., Rail Yard: TSB
    The Transportation Safety Board has determined inadequate safety training contributed to the injury of a track worker at a rail yard in Delta, B.C.

    No One On Watch As Track Worker Injured At Delta, B.C., Rail Yard: TSB

    Search Underway In B.C. After Man Swept Into Squamish River, RCMP says

    Search Underway In B.C. After Man Swept Into Squamish River, RCMP says
    Police say they are searching for a man who was swept into the Squamish River in B.C. early Sunday morning.

    Search Underway In B.C. After Man Swept Into Squamish River, RCMP says

    Alberta School Division Sorry After Employee Dressed Up As Spice Girl With Blackface

    Alberta School Division Sorry After Employee Dressed Up As Spice Girl With Blackface
    SHERWOOD PARK, Alta. — An Alberta school division has apologized after a staff member at a Christian school wore blackface while dressed up as a member of the British band Spice Girls.

    Alberta School Division Sorry After Employee Dressed Up As Spice Girl With Blackface