Trudeau Silent as B.C. First Nations Take Site C Dam Fight to Federal Court

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DeSmog Canada Named as Finalist for Two Canadian Online Publishing Awards

The 2016 finalists for the Canadian Online Publishing Awards have been announced and DeSmog Canada has made the cut in two categories — alongside Maclean’s Magazine, the Toronto Star, The Huffington Post, the Winnipeg Free Press and the National Observer.

In the Best Blog category, DeSmog Canada is nominated for its coverage of the indigenous youth suicide epidemic and its relationship to natural resource development.

Also featured is DeSmog's coverage of the Mount Polley mine disaster and the provincial government’s failure to levy any charges or fines against the company responsible, and our coverage of Canada’s enormous untapped geothermal energy potential. Read more.

Grizzly Bear Advocates Determined to Make Trophy Hunt a Top B.C. Election Issue

Unmistakable grizzly bear prints in the soft sand of English Bay were enough to stop some dog walkers in their tracks Tuesday.

But, it was sculptor George Rammell, art instructor at Capilano University, marching down the beach, making prints with casts of bear paws strapped to his feet.

“There aren’t going to be bears out there if we keep on the way we are going,” Rammell, one of a growing number of British Columbians committed to stopping the province’s grizzly bear trophy hunt, said.

“Imagine if B.C. was a grizzly bear sanctuary, what a message it would send to the world,” Rammell said at the launch of Justice for B.C. Grizzlies, a newly formed group that supporters to actively lobby sitting politicians and candidates in the upcoming provincial election. Read more.

Trudeau Silent as B.C. First Nations Take Site C Dam Fight to Federal Court

A caravan of Treaty 8 First Nations fighting the Site C dam arrived in Ottawa this week, calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to halt the $9-billion project they say violates treaty rights.

The group arrives on Parliament Hill after a cross-Canada journey that brought them to the Federal Court of Appeal in Montreal on Monday, where a legal challenge by the West Moberly and Prophet River First Nations was heard.

"Anyone who reads the environmental assessment report can see that the Site C dam is an indisputable threat to our rights,” said Roland Willson, West Moberly First Nation Chief. Read more.

Feds Appoint Chair of B.C. Industry Group to Panel Reviewing Environmental Assessment Process

http://www.desmog.ca/2016/09/08/feds-appoint-chair-b-c-industry-group-panel-reviewing-environmental-assessment-process

The federal government has appointed the founding chair of a vocal B.C.-based industry advocacy group to a four-member panel tasked with reviewing Canada’s environmental assessment process.

The panel is part of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s attempt to make good on his campaign promise to restore credibility to environmental reviews of major energy projects — but the appointment calls into question the credibility of the panel.

The appointee, Doug Horswill, is the founding chair of Resource Works, an industry advocacy group with close ties to the BC Liberals that aggressively advocates for the interests of extractive industries in B.C. Read more.

Owner of Acid-leaking Tulsequah Chief Mine Goes into Receivership

Cleanup of the troubled Tulsequah Chief mine in northwest B.C., which has leaked acidic water into nearby streams and rivers for more than six decades, is again in limbo following an announcement by the owner, Toronto-based Chieftain Metals Inc., that the company is in receivership.

Chieftain said the accounting firm Grant Thornton “was appointed through court order as the receiver of all the assets, undertakings and properties of Chieftain.” The majority of company directors have resigned. The court order came after a demand by West Face Capitol for repayment of a $26-million loan.r0

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