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MAY
24

05.24.2012 05:00 PM - 07:00 PM
Oil Tankers & Pipelines: Good Business or Impending Disaster?

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The Tsilhqot'in First Nations and their supporters fought for and won an injunction at the BC Supreme Court to keep Taseko Mines from commencing work on the controversial proposed Prosperity Mine.
Published in Video

Listen to Rafe and Damien's recent appearance on CHLY's "A Sense of Justice". The two discuss a wide variety of topics with host Rae Kornberger - including Rafe's upcoming Roast and some reflections on his long and storied career in politics and media. Also on the agenda is the Auditor General's recent report, which exposed BC Hydro's bogus accounting practices, hiding billions in losses that will only further drive up British Columbians' power bills.

While US lawmakers are calling for an emergency plan to address the discovery of deadly ISAv in wild BC sockeye, the Campbell/Clark Government is preoccupied with attacking the reputation of the world's top ISAv testing lab and covering their own butts..."This is no longer a matter to leave to our backward, incompetent, self-interested BC Liberal Government. This is an international issue of grave import, as our neighbours to the south and north are reminding us. We have a duty to work with them to address this matter with the utmost sense of urgency."

On the eve of municipal elections, Delta Council has unanimously voted to begin amending its Official Community Plan, paving the way for a highly controversial housing development by Century Group atop the Southlands (aka Spetifore Farm). The October 17 decision could override a recent lengthy public consultation process that rejected changes to the Tsawwassen Area Plan (one of three communities that constitute Delta) to rezone the property for development...“The public has clearly indicated their wishes to keep this land agricultural," said Dana Maslovat of Southlands the Facts.

Like most of the observers at the recent Cohen Commission hearings on aquaculture and diseases, I had a mixed reaction to what I saw. I shared the consternation of many in attendance at the continued obfuscation from the scientists and managers of DFO, the Province and the aquaculture industry on the stand. Yet, I also believe the Commission will prove, in the fullness of time, a worthy exercise. Not necessarily because of whatever official recommendations eventually emerge, but because of the Inquiry's many ancillary benefits.

Damien Gillis joins Rae Kornberger - host of CHLY Nanaimo's A Sense of Justice - to discuss recent developments at the Cohen Commission into disappearing Fraser sockeye, as well as the future of private power and BC Hydro. Damien reports on the salmon Inquiry's hearings on aquaculture and diseases - including biologist Alexandra Morton's appearance on the stand - and dramatic twists in the story of the Campbell/Clark Liberals' disastrous IPP policy. (From Sept. 7)

Smart meters are a tax-payer rip-off and pose serious health threats to British Columbians, a crowd gathered at BC Hydro's Vancouver headquarters heard from the spokespeople of an number of organizations opposed to the provincial government-mandated program. (2 min)
Published in Video

A proposal from Mainstream Canada for a new 56-hectare open net pen salmon farm in Clayoquot Sound threatens the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve's already hard-hit wild salmon stocks.
Published in Video

From The Gulf Islands Driftwood - May 5, 2011

by David Denning

Special to the Driftwood

Alexandra Morton has been making a lot of headlines recently, and hopefully also, some headway.

Her message is simple: protect wild salmon stocks in British Columbia that are under threat from many problems, including the scourge of diseases and parasites that have accompanied salmon farming in coastal B.C.

On Sunday, May 8, Morton and two high-profile friends of common-sense environmental action, Rafe Mair and Damien Gillis, will speak at Fulford Hall. The multi-media program called Salt Spring, Salmon and Sanity begins at 7 p.m.

Morton has literally walked and paddled the length of Vancouver Island to make politicians and citizens more aware of our threatened wild salmon. She’s taken the provincial government to court to challenge its management of salmon farming — and won. She’s challenged every one of the current MP candidates in B.C. to get behind land-based salmon farming that controls fish diseases, supports jobs for both wild salmon fishers and land-based fish farmers, and is the only sustainable approach to salmon farming. Candidates in all but one of the four major parties are committed to her approach. You can probably guess which party said “no.”

Mair is a well-known radio commentator, blogger, political and environmental activist. A former Socred MLA in the 1980s, Mair, who held several cabinet posts, including Minister of Environment, is well-qualified to advocate for careful management of natural resources in B.C. for the benefit of people, not big business. Mair has spearheaded the challenge to private hydro development on public streams and rivers.

Gillis is at the leading edge of communications about B.C. environmental issues. Using video and the web, Gillis provides valuable insights into multiple issues, including the Enron Pipeline, which, by creating a coastal flow of giant oil tankers, ultimately threatens the entire coast of B.C., including Salt Spring Island.

Mair and Gillis have teamed up with their environmental reporting website, theCanadian.org.

This presentation by Morton, Mair and Gillis will follow the federal election by only one week. No doubt the speakers will provide us with a clearer view of the new currents we will face as we swim upstream to protect wild salmon, our rivers, our coastal shores and marine wildlife, and our democracy.

Tickets for the event are $15 at Salt Spring Books. Funds raised will support the work of Morton for wild salmon conservation.

The event is sponsored by the Salt Spring Island Conservancy.

Read original article


Rafe is fond of citing a line from economist John Kenneth Galbraith in response to the theory of trickle-down economics:"If you feed the horse enough oats, some will pass through to the road for the sparrows." Galbraith clearly didn't believe in trickle-down economics; and unless you are the horse in this metaphor, neither should you. Yet, as voters prepare to cast their ballots in a federal election, this time-worn myth is being roundly deployed by Stephen Harper's Conservatives.

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