TOGGY AND ANDY MAY BE ABLE TO STAY
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WHO SPENT WHAT IN THE CIVIC ELECTION?
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RECORD LOW SNOWPACKS
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FRIDAY
FEBRUARY 27 2015 www.burnabynewsleader.com
Should the rich pay more? Tom Fletcher, B.C. legislature reporter for Black Press, weighs in on the provincial government’s tax cuts for high-income earners. See Page A6
Kinder Morgan defends spill plan secrecy Response details to be kept private from general public for ‘security’ reasons Wanda Chow
wchow@burnabynewsleader.com
MARIO BARTEL / NEWSLEADER
UNIVERSITY HEALTH PLAN PANNED
Reagan Belan, the chief steward for the Teaching Support Staff Union at Simon Fraser University, says her group has collected more than 500 signatures on a petition calling for an end to mandatory enrolment of foreign students into the private Guard.me health insurance program. SFU argues that the program’s coverage exceeds what’s offered in more economical plans and keeps student needs a priority. See full story, page 8.
Anti-terror bill goes too far, Burnaby MP argues Wanda Chow
wchow@burnabynewsleader.com
What do Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan, gardening grannies along the Arbutus corridor and truckers serving local ports have in common? They could all find themselves the targets of Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) or RCMP operations if a proposed anti-terrorism bill is passed in
Parliament, according to BurnabyDouglas New Democrat MP Kennedy Stewart. Bill C-51 defines “activity that undermines the security of Canada” as including that which interferes with “the economic or financial stability of Canada” and “critical infrastructure.” As Stewart said in the House of
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CHOICEquotes Kennedy Stewart, NDP It’s not that you’ve actually done anything, it’s just that you have said that you may do something.
Commons recently, that could apply to Corrigan, who has said in media reports that he would lie down
in front of bulldozers to stop the proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion from going ahead. Conservative MP Ted Opitz (Etobicoke Centre) responded that “a warrant would never be issued” if there were Charter implications and it “did not pass muster with a judge.”
This week’s feature:
Discovering Iceland… with a Land Rover!
drivewaycanada.ca
Please see MP WORRIES, A5
Kinder Morgan Canada will provide details of its emergency response plans directly to governments and first responders, but on the condition the information be kept private, said company President Ian Anderson. The National Energy Board (NEB) ruled that Kinder Morgan is not required to make the emergency plans for its Trans Mountain pipeline public as part of the review process for its expansion proposal. The company has been roundly criticized by opponents of the project, including the City of Burnaby, for not releasing the plans already. Please see ‘WHO SHOULD GET WHAT?’, A11