Kitimat Northern Sentinel, July 31, 2013

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Sentinel

Northern

www.northernsentinel.com

Volume 58 No. 31

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

$

1.30 INCLUDES TAX

Chief Councillor Ellis Ross of the Haisla Nation Council gives Canada’s Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver his first look at the Douglas Channel, where he saw the proposed sites for liquefied natural gas projects in the area. Cameron Orr

Haisla host natural resources minister on tour Cameron Orr Canada’s Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver saw the Douglas Channel for the first time on July 23 on a fact finding mission hosted by the Haisla. It was also Oliver’s fourth opportunity to meet with Chief Councillor Ellis Ross. “I wanted to meet him [Ross] again and some other members of the [Haisla], and to see the channel, just to get a sense of its size,” said Oliver at the end of his boat tour down the channel, which took him as far as the possible future site of the Kitimat LNG project. Haisla Chief Councillor Ellis Ross said the visit was definitely a kind of “getting to know each other” meeting, but some longstanding Haisla issues were included in the conversations. “The number one issue we have with the federal government right now is their initiative to turn the Douglas Channel into a public port,” said Ross. “We don’t agree

with that, in fact the Haisla have been working for the last five or six years on studying the rationale for this to be a private port.” While he understands the federal government’s role in terms of shipping traffic, he believes it should be “the people on the ground” running the port, not the government. While he doesn’t think the Haisla themselves would have a hand in running it, they have capable partners who could, he said. “This all goes back to the Haisla wanting to be part of the decision making that affects rights and title,” he said. “We’re looking at the Douglas Channel in general, and mainly what we’re looking at is Haisla territory.” He adds, “We can be specific about what the Haisla want to see in terms of traffic coming into Douglas Channel.” Additionally, Ross believes way too much attention has been paid to the En-

bridge Northern Gateway Pipelines proposal and that all levels of government need to move on to more achievable goals. “There seems to be a lot of effort, a lot of anxiety about Enbridge’s project to get crude oil to Asia, but there doesn’t seem to be that amount of interest in getting natural gas to Asia from the federal government,” he said. Ross notes the approval of a number of export permits already for the region. “There’s just so much momentum now for the natural gas industry.” He said more effort made to natural gas exports will be more beneficial to the area and to the country at large. “I think the Enbridge proposal has been mishandled from day one. So why keep beating a dead horse? Lets get the things we can get done right now.” The potential is there, in this channel, to ship so much more as well, including minerals and pellets, said Ross.

All that being said though, he’s feeling good about the Haisla’s relationship with the federal government these days. They’re being more inclusive, and to Oliver’s credit, said Ross, he didn’t spend much time talking about Enbridge either. “I think Joe Oliver’s trip down here... really opened his eyes to the potential we have here,” he said. “I think we’re taking small steps in the right direction in terms of the relationship with the federal government.” Ross adds that the federal government has been spending more time looking at the area and gathering information and generally “taking it a lot slower than they were.” Oliver also reflected on his visit during an interview following his boat tour on the Douglas Channel. Oliver said that as LNG projects come online, it’s important that the prosperity is shared with the aboriginal community. Continued on page 3

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