Pipeline opponent says new federal review rules restrict public participation

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Calgary Herald

Opponents of Kinder Morgan's proposed expansion of its Trans Mountain oil pipeline say the process for signing up to participate in public hearings is discouraging critics.

Under new federal rules brought in last year, participation in such federal regulatory review hearings is limited to those who can prove they are directly affected by a project.

Applications are being accepted by the National Energy Board from Jan. 15 to Feb. 12.

The Wilderness Committee says the process now involves signing up for a government user ID or through a financial institution and then completing a lengthy online application form, or waiting for the official form to be delivered by mail.

The group's Eoin Madden says the sign-up process and other changes are limiting public participation.

Before making the changes, federal Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver expressed concern that "foreign special interest groups" had "hijacked" the regulatory process.

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This story by the Canadian Press was also published in The Province, Times Colonist, Metro News, News 1130 (online), Huffington Post BC and other publications.

 


Photo: An oil tanker leaving the Kinder Morgan terminal in Burnaby, BC crosses beneath the Second Narrows bridge.

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