Read this important article from CBC.ca on BC Auditor-General John Doyle’s scathing assessment of the BC Environmental Assessment Office. (July 7)
Tag Archives: Politics
Was the Gordon Campbell Government Truly Corrupt?
Was the Gordon Campbell government corrupt? Does it matter?
The answer to both questions is a resounding YES!
For the purposes of this article I define corruption as “acting against the public good for political or other gains for the government party and/or its members, to the exclusion of meaningful public input”.
Let me summarize the Campbell corruption:
- In 2001, Campbell, while saying the NDP left a threadbare cupboard, promptly gave a huge tax cut to the better off, mostly his supporters
- Campbell, after raging at NDP ministers who allegedly misbehaved, got thrown in jail for drunk driving, promptly forgave himself and stayed in office.
- Campbell, after I showed him a vial with Pink Salmon smolts covered in sea lice stated to me, “I saw a billboard showing salmon spawning and vowed that my grandchildren must be able to see this sight” – then promptly doubled the number of fish farms and pilloried the world’s scientists who confirmed the sea lice problem.
- Campbell, after vowing in the 1997 and 2001 elections never to privatize BC Hydro, promptly unleashed just such a program.
- Two men were charged with crimes involving the 990 year lease of BC Rail and on the eve of his former Finance Minister and his own call to the witness stand, Campbell promptly ended the case by paying $6 million to the miscreants’ lawyers.
- In the 2009 election Campbell and his Finance Minister declared that their 2009 budget was accurate then admitted right after the election that they were more than a billion dollars out, claiming that they were blindsided by the Recession. In fact, the Finance Minister had to know of the true state of affairs or was grossly negligent or the Finance Ministry should fire its senior people for the warnings (reduced sales tax etc.) were all there.
- In the 2009 election Campbell and his Finance Minister claimed that an HST was not in the radar screen then announced it right after the election. It turned out that two months before the election the Finance Minister had a Ministry document in hand which criticized an HST and it must be assumed that the Campbell government had been in negotiations with the Federal government months before – these things don’t happen overnight.
- The Campbell government, taking the lead from Alcan, produced an Energy Policy which transferred the right to produce new energy from BC Hydro to the private sector then, through the mouth of Finance Minister Hansen, lied about the policy of private power.
- The Campbell government has brought BC Hydro to the position which, if they were a private company, would be in bankruptcy protection or actual bankruptcy.
- The Campbell government has done less than nothing on the oil pipelines and oil tankers issue, leaving it an open invitation to companies to bring on stream dead certain environmental catastrophes to our pristine environment both on land and in the ocean
It’s noteworthy that after Campbell resigned in disgrace the Liberals promised a testimonial for him either at the leadership convention or its annual party conference, neither of which have happened in the hope the public will not see this oversight as part of Christy Clark distancing herself from the ex premier – which it is. (Perhaps such a testimonial did occur on the quiet, maybe in the basement of the Fraser Institute or after midnight in the editorial offices of the Vancouver Sun or Province.
What has this to do with Premier Clark?
Just everything, that’s all.
To start with, Ms. Clark helped draft the 2001 Liberal platform which, amongst other things, promised not to privatize BC Rail. In fact she was in office during the planning and/or implementing many of these policies and it’s noteworthy that she didn’t contradict any of the Campbell outrages while in radio because she wasn’t remotely independent.
The real issue in the next election is a simple one: Will Premier Clark succeed in making us forget the harm perpetrated by her corrupt predecessor? You can be damned sure that she’ll not bring it up!
What does this mean in real terms?
- The bankruptcy of BC Hydro, which will remain only as a conduit by which the private producers (IPPS) funnel their ill-gotten gains to their shareholders abroad.
- It means that more and more of our precious rivers will be dammed (IPPs prefer the word “weir” in keeping with the Orwellian “newspeak” that abounds with these guys), with clear cuts for roads and transmission lines.
- It means that new pipelines and enlarged old ones will carry the sludge from the Tar Sands to our coast with the mathematical certainty of environmental disasters – without our government making a nickel out of it.
- It means that supertankers will proliferate on our coast again with the mathematical certainty of catastrophic spills.
- It means continuation of the phoney environmental hearings where the public is denied its right to challenge the need for the project in the first place.
- It means that the already truncated BC Utilities Commission, which overseas (or is supposed to) all energy proposals, will be abolished or maintained as a lame duck puppet of the Liberal Government
- It means that the private sector will, unhindered, do as it pleases to our environment.
People like me will be jeered as being “against progress, against profit and anti-business”.
In fact what I’m doing is urging that environmental decisions be made by the BC Public, not party hacks supported by corporations that couldn’t care less about our environment – nor should they be expected to, for their obligation is to make profits for shareholders.
I’m trying to get across that there is a limit to what we can do to our environment, much including our farmland. I’m reminding folks that history teaches us that unrestrained industry will go after the last fish in the ocean, cut down the last stand of trees and ruin without a blink any rivers it needs for power or a sewer or both.
I ask this: If not now, when do we decide that enough is enough?
The truth of the matter is that Christy Clark has no greater concern for environmental issues than Campbell has, such that in the next election she must be assessed on that basis. Elect Clark and fish farms will flourish, lakes and rivers will be contaminated, BC Hydro will die, farmland will be destroyed, and the public will continue be shut out of the approval process.
We know all this because Clark has perpetuated the corrupt policies that Campbell initiated.
If we re-elect a Liberal government, we know what it will mean and we will deserve what we get.
Ottawa to Privatize Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd.
Read this article from the Globe and Mail on the Harper Government’s decision to sell AECL to Montreal engineering giant SNC-Lavalin – June 28, 2011.
Why the Precautionary Principle Should but Doesn’t Apply in BC
There is a reason that we who want to save our environment are losing the war and may lose it outright unless we gird up our loins and fight to the death, politically speaking.
The reason is simple: no government set in authority over us will apply the “Precautionary Principle” (despite Canada’s international commitment to uphold it) to undertakings in the environment and thus they permit despoilers to get away with, literally, murder.
Here is the principle as generally stated. “The precautionary principle …states that if an action or policy has a suspected risk of causing harm to the public or to the environment, in the absence of scientific consensus that the action or policy is harmful, the burden of proof that it is not harmful falls on those taking the action.”
This is what this means to British Columbians – the Precautionary Principle prevails, or rather should prevail, in the following cases: Fish farming, power projects, threats to the atmosphere, pipelines and tanker traffic. It also should apply, in my opinion, to highway and bridge construction.
In fact, in each of the above cases the onus has rested not on the potential despoiler but on the general public. This turnabout provides the despoiler with a one line defence which runs, “You don’t really believe that crap do you?” That becomes an effective reply to the strongest scientific argument – it’s really a thinly disguised “Big Lie” technique.
Let’s look at how this has been applied.
For over a decade the persistent and courageous Alexandra Morton has led a scientific investigation into the adverse – to put it mildly – impact of sea lice from fish farms on migrating wild salmon. Her studies have been peer-reviewed (that is to say reviewed by other scientists and published in recognized scientific journals) by virtually every scientist in the world who deals in this area. Moreover many fish biologists have carried out their own peer reviewed studies which have concluded, as Ms. Morton has, that the impact from sea lice from fish farms is enormously destructive.
What have industry and the government done?
Through discredited former environmentalists like Patrick Moore and industry flacks like Mary Ellen Walling they’ve simply denied the findings and distorted the evidence hoping, and often succeeding, to be able to ask the public, “You don’t really believe that crap do you?”…”Would you deny British Columbians jobs because of unproved charges by some so-called scientist?”
NOT BEING REQUIRED TO DEMONSTRATE THE SAFETY OF WHAT THEY DO, THEY ARE ABLE TO SIT BACK AND RAISE DOUBTS ON NO EVIDENCE WHATSOEVER!
The ad hominem attack on a scientist by an industry or, sadly, government flack counts for more than properly researched science. Thus has the proper method of determining environmental safety been subverted to high priced PR flackery.
Thus the silly but effective question, “You don’t really believe that crap?” trumps science.
This industry/government defence has a slightly different twist when it comes to the private/public power debate. Here the government – wonders never cease – actually admits that some environmental harm could come from gutting rivers, diverting the water with dams and clear-cutting for roads and transmission lines; so they convene environmental hearings and in doing so don’t follow the “precautionary principle” – heaven forefend! – but the political principle which states simply, “Never hold a hearing unless you know what the result will be.” Consequently these hearings are convened by the company in a location least likely to be conducive to large crowds and the government fixes the result by making it out of order to ask any questions about the desirability of the scheme in the first place!
In short, by the time the public has a say, it’s a done deal and the only issue left is the terms of reference for the “scientific” investigation by – hold your breath now – the government that has already approved the deal in principle, and the “environmental department” and paid consultants of the company!
When Dr. John Calvert, Dr. Marvin Shaffer, noted scientists, economist Erik Andersen, environmentalists Joe Foy, Gwen Barlee, Damien Gillis or Rafe Mair lay before the public the facts on how the Liberals destroy the environment to make power BC Hydro must buy at a huge loss, putting BC Hydro in mortal peril, the company and government need only ask, “Do you believe that crap from those environmental maniacs?” – and the job is done.
With pipelines and oil tankers the story takes a slightly different tack. There have been so many spills and ruptures that neither government nor industry can deny that they happen – they would like to but even their PR flacks have some credibility limitations. The propositions put forward by the companies and their hired governments are even more breathtaking for they say that the risks are “reasonable” or “slight” or “manageable” – and outweighed by the stated (and grossly exaggerated) benefits.
Think on that for a second and several facts pop up. For one, if you are going to do something forever with no limitations on how often or how long you will do it, a spill or a leak is no longer a risk but a certainty waiting to happen.
Then comes the inevitable conclusion: when it happens it will be devastating! Every oil spill or leak is!
Thus the emollient offerings by company and government are met by the certainty that their project will be a major catastrophe, yet the cries of those who know that a catastrophe will certainly occur are drowned out by the cry, “Do you believe that crap from those people who don’t want any ‘progress’ and who hate industry?”
The absolute certainty of environmental catastrophe is met by bought-and-paid-for government and industry flacks who pour it on with the basic theme that “life is risky; we must take risks to develop and grow and create jobs and are you going to listen to that shit from eco-freaks like Rex Weyler?”
Let me ask of you this question: who of you, after the disaster, will agree it was a “risk” worth taking, especially when you’ve known in your tummy all along that it was no risk but a dead certainty?
The matter must be fairly stated – development in this province is done by corporations who don’t give a fiddler’s fart for the environment, and why should they? Their obligation is to make money for their shareholders, so why would we expect them to care? If they did care they would be in breach of their shareholders’ trust.
This industry finances the Liberal and Conservative governments – make no mistake on that account. Those governments have an obligation to repay that debt and can be counted upon to do so.
There is an interesting sidelight to all this. Opponents to the Liberal government either have a history – or have been painted as having a history of incompetence. That’s the rap and the Liberals play it like a finely tuned Stradivarius.
Is that to say that the government that has privatized BC Rail, forced BC Hydro to the brink of bankruptcy, run up huge deficits and nearly doubled the provincial debt while turning over our outdoors to large, mostly foreign corporations is to be seen as competent? A government that lies about its budget, the HST and destroys our environment is a good government?
I had plenty to say about the NDP governments in their 1991-2001 decade and very little of it complimentary. But compared to this Liberal bunch they were paragons of fiscal probity. Whatever index you like – corporate profits, economic growth, provincial debts and contributing deficits, employment – you name it – the NDP are clear winners and you only need read what the far right wing Canadian Taxpayers Federation has to say for the proof.
We, the people of British Columbia must, in my view, ponder the consequences of more of the same from this Liberal government: ruined rivers and streams, tar sands bitumen spilled on our virgin lands and in our oceans, our soul – the Pacific Salmon – destroyed, our coveted power company ransacked by private and mostly foreign corporations, our farmland and sensitive habitat ravaged; a government that promises more of the same and defends itself only by defaming those who are critical of it. A government that had to change the law to avoid balancing its books.
If you stop and examine the Liberal’s rationale for its uncaring attitude towards the environment, it fails and fails badly in economic terms. Their policies not only are ruinous to our environment, but they provide virtually no permanent jobs, bring little, if any, revenue into the provincial coffers and leave behind damage that will be with us forever.
Fish farms don’t produce jobs, only a handful of caretakers. The same applies to private power corporations after short term construction; pipelines and oil tankers not only don’t provide jobs, their profits go out of province. In short, the vaunted Liberal talent for enhancing the economy doesn’t do that – it enhances Alberta’s revenues and those of the huge corporations whose ads tell us how much they care, while leaving permanent destruction for us who live in its path.
All elections are crap shoots and all politicians disappoint. We are, however, looking at an opposition that has a much strengthened and experienced front bench; it is an opposition that has put a great deal of its political cant behind it while retaining what I see as critical sensitivity to our traditions and the legacy we leave; it is also an opposition that has learned bitter lessons from its past.
It is possible to have social sensitivity and prosperity – in fact the latter, if it’s to last, must have the former. That the NDP have learned that destruction of our environment doesn’t bring prosperity is surely a plus.
Looking at the choice that faces us I can see no sensible alternative to throwing out the Liberals – and the sooner, the better.
Canada agrees on science against asbetos, yet still opposes banning exports
Read this Vancouver Sun story on Canada’s position at a UN convention to decide on whether to label asbestos a carcinogen – June 24, 2011
Harper to name Gordon Campbell as High Commissioner to Britain: Sources
The Toronto Star is reporting that former BC premier Gordon Campbell will be appointed by Stephen Harper as Canada’s High Commissioner to Britain – June 22, 2011
US House Vote Blocks FDA Approval of Genetically Engineered Salmon
From SustainableBusiness.com – June 20, 2011
The US House of Representatives last week passed an amendment that
blocks the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) from approving genetically
engineered (GE) salmon – the first genetically engineered animal
intended for human consumption.
During full floor debate of the Fiscal Year 2012 Agriculture and FDA
appropriations bill, members of the House passed an amendment offered by
Reps. Don Young (R-AK) and Lynn Woolsey (D-CA) to prohibit use of FDA
funds to approve any application for approval of genetically engineered
salmon.
The full appropriations bill, The Agriculture, Rural Development, Food
and Drug Administration and Related Agencies Appropriations Act (H.R.
2112), passed on Thursday by a 217-203 vote.
The Center for Food Safety (CFS) applauded passage of the amendment:
“We thank members of the House for stepping in to correct FDA’s
misguided decision to go ahead with this approval process which fails to
take into account a plethora of economic, human health, environmental
and animal welfare concerns,” says Andrew Kimbrell, Executive Director
of the Center for Food Safety. “Any decision to approve GE salmon would
be a continuation of the Obama Administration’s illogical biotech
bailout at the expense of American jobs and our fishing economy.”
The FDA currently approves GE animals through its new animal drug law,
yet critics fault the process as failing to require adequate safety
assessments and lacking transparency and public engagement. The decision
to regulate GE animals as animal drugs was announced by FDA in 2009 in
the form of a Guidance to Industry, a non-binding form of regulation.
“We need a robust regulatory system that assesses the full suite of
economic, human health, environmental and animal welfare risks posed by
GE animals and allows for full and open public participation,” adds
Colin O’Neil, Regulatory Policy Analyst for the Center for Food Safety.
In September 2010, more than 40 members of Congress sent letters requesting FDA halt the approval of the long-shelved AquaBounty transgenic salmon.
“The FDA’s hastily completed approval process puts American consumers
and the environment at risk. GE salmon could be devastating to fishing
and coastal communities, our food source, and already depleted wild
salmon populations. The FDA should put the interests and safety of
American families and our ocean resources above special interests,” Rep.
DeFazio said in September.
In February, Senator Mark Begich (D-Alaska) and Representative Don Young
(R-Alaska) introduced complimentary legislation that would ban
genetically engineered (GE) fish and require mandatory labeling if
approved.
The two pieces of legislation were endorsed by 67 consumer, worker,
religious and environmental groups, along with commercial, recreational
and subsistence fisheries associations, and food businesses and
retailers.
Those groups include the Center for Food Safety, Ocean Conservancy,
Bristol Bay Regional Seafood Development, the Alaska Trollers
Association, Food and Water Watch, the National Cooperative Grocers
Association, Trout Unlimited and the Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen’s Associations among others.
Last fall, over 300 environmental, consumer, health, and animal welfare
organizations, along with salmon and fishing groups and associations,
food companies, chefs and restaurants signed joint letters to the FDA opposing
the approval of AquaBounty’s GE salmon. Additionally nearly 400,000
public comments were sent to FDA from citizens demanding the agency
reject this application and require mandatory labeling of this
transgenic salmon should it decide to approve it.
Read original article
Ex-B.C. cabinet minister Chuck Strahl urges Tories to act on asbestos
From the Vancouver Sun – June 20, 2011
by Sarah Schmidt
OTTAWA — The Conservative government took a hit from friendly-fire
Monday when a former Tory cabinet minister who has battled lung cancer
pleaded with his former colleagues to support limits on the export of
chrysotile asbestos.
Chuck Strahl, a senior Tory cabinet
minister until his retirement from politics in May, wrote a column on
the opening day of an international conference to decide whether the
substance should be labelled as a hazardous material under the United
Nations’ Rotterdam Convention.
Strahl called on Ottawa to
stand with the world’s industrialized countries and list the carcinogen
on Annex III of the Rotterdam Convention.
This is a special
list that requires “Prior Informed Consent” before countries can export
the hazardous product to another country. Placing it on the list means
recipient countries must be informed of the hazards and can refuse to
accept it if they believe they can’t handle it safety.
Strahl, a former British Columbia logging contractor, developed lung cancer linked to his exposure to asbestos.
Although
the four-day UN meeting kicked off Monday in Geneva, the government has
yet to disclose whether Canada supports the listing of chrysotile
asbestos on Annex III.
The mineral is mined in Quebec and exported to developing countries such as India and Thailand.
Strahl
told Industry Minister Christian Paradis and Prime Minister Stephen
Harper that it’s time for Canada to support flagging the carcinogen as
potentially harmful because importers and exporters have the right to
know there are serious health risks if misused.
“Loggers
like me operated some of industry’s largest and most dangerous
equipment. I loved every minute of it. Huge and powerful, they fit the
personalities of the men of the woods — aggressive, production-oriented,
no-nonsense types who didn’t wait around to listen to some do-gooder
tell them about the dangers of asbestos. That was a big, big mistake,”
Strahl wrote in the Globe and Mail.
“Not surprisingly,
exposure of this kind caused problems. But never immediately. Like
smoking a cigarette, the effects take time. And, like smoking a
cigarette in those days, people just didn’t know about the long term
impacts of asbestos. But we do today. The doctors tell me that the
cancer I was diagnosed with six years ago and collapsed my lung was
certainly caused by exposure to asbestos. Miraculously and thankfully,
my cancer hasn’t grown and I’m symptom-free. Most guys that get
diagnosed are dead in six to 12 months.”
Strahl added: “The
Prime Minister and Quebec’s regional minister have both said that they
support the safe use of chrysotile asbestos. It’s hard to argue with
that. By listing chrysotile in the Rotterdam Convention as a product
that deserves to be handled carefully and with proper warnings, safe use
is more likely to occur. Workers from all countries will be grateful
for that notification — if not today, then a generation from now.”
At
the most recent Rotterdam Convention meeting in 2008, consideration of
whether chrysotile asbestos should be listed was deferred after
consensus could not be reached. Canada split with industrialized
countries by objecting to the listing, along with a handful of other
countries, including Iran, Kyrgyzstan and Zimbabwe.
Canada
also blocked the move to list chrysotile asbestos at the 2006
conference. At the time, Health Canada’s bureaucracy wanted to include
the carcinogen on the convention’s list of hazardous chemicals.
Under
the convention, hazardous chemicals and pesticides that have already
been banned, or whose uses are severely restricted in many countries,
are listed in Annex III if they also meet certain scientific criteria.
The convention’s expert scientific committee has repeatedly recommended
that chrysotile asbestos, already banned in many countries, be placed on
the list.
Paradis was not immediately available to comment on Strahl’s salvo.
On
Friday, his spokeswoman said it wasn’t the right time to discuss
Canada’s position on the Rotterdam Convention. Paradis, who has also
served as natural resources minister, represents the Quebec riding of
Megantic-L’Erable, home to Canada’s last-remaining asbestos mine.
“There
are times when it’s time to disclose it and there are times when it’s
not the time, and now it’s not the time,” spokesman Pascale Boulay said
Friday.
“Canada knows what its position is.”
After
the opening day of the conference Monday, countries are scheduled
Tuesday to discuss the recommendation from the convention’s committee of
scientists to list chrysotile asbestos as a hazardous substance.
Anti-asbestos
campaigners say they believe Canada will continue to push to keep the
mineral off the convention’s list of hazardous materials. They accuse
Paradis — whom they call the “czar of asbestos” — of overruling health
and environment experts within the federal government.
Read original article
Alexandra Morton on ISA in Canada
From Alexandra Morton’s blog – June 16, 2011
Read this eye-opening blog from Alexandra Morton on the possibility of deadly Infectious Salmon Anemia in Canada – and the utter lack of government oversight.
NDP MP Fin Donnelly Reintroduces Bills on Salmon & Oil Tankers
This week in Ottawa, NDP MP for New Westminster-Coquitlam-Port Moody Fin Donnelly reintroduced two private members bills he authored last year. The first calls for a legislated ban on oil supertanker traffic on BC’s North and Central Coast. The second, called the Wild Salmon Protection Act, calls for open net pen salmon farms to be transitioned to land-based closed-containment technology.
Donnelly reintroduced his oil supertanker bill yesterday, seconded by BC MP for Skeena-Bulkley Valley, Nathan Cullen, whose riding would encompass much of the proposed Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline route and tanker port in the coastal community of Kitimat.
“British Columbians have been clear. They want to protect our north coast and permanently ban oil tanker traffic though the Hecate Strait, Dixon Entrance and Queen Charlotte Sound,” said New Democrat Fisheries and Oceans Critic Fin Donnelly. “A major spill off BC’s north coast would be catastrophic to the ecosystem and would negatively affect the economy in this area.”
A recent poll reconfirmed 80% of British Columbians oppose oil tanker traffic off the province’s rugged north coast – which is consistent with polling figures over the past year.
Donnelly said in Ottawa, “I urge Parliament to consider the risks associated with oil super tankers travelling off BC’s north coast and legislate a permanent ban.”
As the NDP’s Fisheries Critic, Donnelly has also been pushing his wild salmon bill in Ottawa for over a year now, with support from the likes of renown biologist Alexandra Morton, Hollywood icon and sports fisherman William Shatner, Chief Bob Chamberlin of the Broughton First Nations, and famed Vancouver chef Robert Clark.
According to Donnelly, “The bill would direct the Fisheries Minister to develop, table and implement a transition plan to move to closed containment.”
“My bill has received tremendous support since I first introduced it in Parliament last year,” said Donnelly. “Thousands of British Columbians have signed postcards and petitions to encourage the federal government to adopt this legislation. I hope that the federal government will listen and pass this critical legislation.”