Calls to Stop Site C Grow as Crowd Gathers on Peace River

Tuesday, July 07, 2015

News Release

FORT ST. JOHN, BC – Hundreds of people in canoes, kayaks and other watercraft will float down the Peace River July 11 to protest the imminent construction of the Site C dam. The $9 billion dam, approved by the B.C. government last December, would flood more than 100 kilometres of the Peace River and its tributaries, forcing farmers, ranchers and other families from their homes.

“The decision to proceed with Site C construction is even more inappropriate in the wake of the Truth and Reconciliation report,” said Chief Roland Willson of the West Moberly First Nations. “Site C does not represent a rapproachement with Canada’s First Nations. It will take us in the opposite direction.”

On July 1, following a petition by two Alberta First Nations, the World Heritage Committee voted to send a mission to investigate Site C and other industrial development affecting the Wood Buffalo World Heritage Site. The committee asked the Canadian government to ensure that no irreversible work is done on Site C until its mission and report are complete.

Six court cases are pending against Site C, including five by First Nations. BC Hydro has served notice that work on the dam can begin as early as this week.

On July 3, the Greater Vancouver Regional District Board, representing 23 local governments and 2.5 million people, voted to ask B.C. Premier Christy Clark for a 2-year moratorium on Site C. The board joins more than 30 other B.C. municipalities calling for a Site C moratorium.

Former Agricultural Land Commission Chair Richard Bullock called the largest removal of agricultural land in the history of B.C.’s Agricultural Land Reserve for Site C a ‘sin against humanity’. Energy Economist Robert McCullough said recently in a report that BC Hydro has dramatically underestimated the cost of producing power from Site C and that far cheaper energy alternatives are available.

Harry Swain, chair of the environmental assessment Joint Review Panel that examined Site C for the federal and provincial governments, said the B.C. government’s decision to proceed with Site C is a “dereliction of duty”.

“The Site C dam is an idea whose time is long gone,” said Wilderness Committee Campaign Director Joe Foy, who will be at the Paddle for the Peace. “It’s a bad idea from the 60s that needs to be dropped for good.”

The annual Paddle for the Peace begins at 9 a.m. at the Halfway River, with a pancake breakfast hosted by the West Moberly First Nations. Boats will be launched into the Peace River at the Halfway tributary for the Paddle, ending at a third-generation farm owned by Ken and Arlene Boon that will be underwater if Site C goes ahead.

“Paddlers will see first-hand the many ecological values, including wildlife habitat and farmland, that would all be lost to Site C,” said Andrea Morison, coordinator for the Peace Valley Environment Association.

High-profile speakers for the Paddle will be announced this week.

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For more information, please contact:

Joe Foy, Wilderness Committee – (604) 880-2580

Verena Hofmann, Treaty 8 First Nations – (250) 793-1124

Andrea Morison, Peace Valley Environment Association – (250) 793-7279

www.StopSiteC.org

 

Background Details:

10th Annual Paddle for the Peace

Launch Site: Confluence of Halfway and Peace Rivers along Hwy. 29 – approx. 30 mins from Fort St. John
Take Out: Bear Flat, Boon’s Field (just below the confluence of Cache Creek and Peace River along Hwy. 29 – approx. 20 mins from Fort St. John)

9:00 to 11:30 am

Registration and FREE pancake breakfast hosted by West Moberly First Nation

12 noon

Launch (all canoes/boats in the Peace River)

12:00 to 2:00 pm

~1.25 hour paddle

1:15 to 2:00 pm

Take out at Bear Flat

FREE BBQ hosted by Halfway River First Nation

It is anticipated that the event will wrap up late in the afternoon

**There will be outhouses at the site, and a bus to take people back to their vehicles at the launch site (Halfway River confluence)

 


Photo: Paddlers at the shore of the Peace River for the 2014 Paddle for the Peace (Joe Foy).

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