Vaughn Palmer: The fine print of moving forward on pipeline flows with uncertainty

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The fine print of moving forward on pipeline flows with uncertainty

VICTORIA — When Premier John Horgan appointed his cabinet in the summer of 2017, he gave each of the 22 ministers an unprecedented assignment in terms of their dealings with Indigenous people.

Controversial because Horgan endorsed the UN declaration when he was in Opposition, at a time when the B.C. Liberal government said the guarantee of “free, prior and informed consent,” meant a “de facto” veto for First Nations. To get there, the government has to prepare and implement an action plan in consultation with First Nations and report back annually on progress made.

“This is a great step forward, the doors are open,” he said in a statement still posted on the B.C. government website. “Utilizing our traditional/hereditary government is the way to positively move forward together.” Horgan was out of the country when the decision came down. By the time he got back from vacation, “the train had left the station” and the showdown was underway.

“I was certainly aware that the Wet’suwet’en leadership was not happy with the plan,” Horgan conceded recently. He also insisted that provincial representatives have been meeting regularly with the Wet’suwet’en to “try to resolve governance questions.” The Unist’ot’en house of the Wet’suwet’en First Nation has constructed and expanded a healing centre in the right of way for the pipeline.

 

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