Energy and Mines Minister Bill Bennett visited southeast Alaska this
summer, trying to calm critics of the province's aggressive push to
build at least 10 mines close to the Alaska border.
"I understand why people feel so strongly about protecting what they
have," Bennett said at a news conference in Juneau. "There's a way of
life here that has tremendous value and the people here don't want to
lose it. I get that."
Bennett's conciliatory tone was in response to an unprecedented
outpouring of concern from a powerful alliance of Alaskan politicians,
tribes, fishing organizations and environmental groups. They're
perturbed by the modern-day gold rush alongside vital transboundary
salmon rivers such as the Unuk, Taku and Stikine.
Indeed, long-held perceptions of Canada as a country with strict
environmental standards and B.C. as a province that values natural
beauty have taken a beating in southeast Alaska. Many now regard
Canadians as bad neighbours who unilaterally make decisions that could
threaten the region's two major economic drivers – tourism and fishing.
Alaskans say they are not against resource extraction, provided there
are adequate environmental and financial safeguards. But they believe
Canada's record – most recently illustrated by the Mount Polley mine
tailings-dam collapse – demonstrate that B.C.'s regulations are not
strong enough to protect downstream communities.
It's little wonder Alaskans have difficulty trusting B.C. when it's
known that in the years leading up to the Mount Polley incident the
provincial government permitted substantial increases in mining, beyond
the design capacity of the tailings facility. Furthermore, in 2010, the
government was told about cracks across the front of the retaining wall.
When Alaskans asked for a panel review of Seabridge Gold's KSM mine,
there was no response from B.C., and the mine was approved. That project
will have a massive 239-metre-high earth dam to hold back toxic
tailings.
Subsequently, the Red Chris mine, close to the Stikine River and
owned by Imperial Metals (the same company that owns the Mount Polley
mine) was given the go-ahead with a tailings dam similar to Mount
Polley's despite a recommendation from a government panel to stop using
such dams.
When I started writing a 10-part series on these transboundary
tensions for online news magazine DeSmog Canada, I expected to be
chronicling differences between environmental regulations in Canada and
the U.S. I didn't expect to stumble upon a vast difference in the
treatment of media requests.
Over the past four months, I've submitted four requests for
interviews with Bennett. Not a single request was granted. Instead, I
was provided with prepared statements to be attributed to a ministry
"spokesperson."
Reporters in B.C. are so commonly left trying to untangle this kind
of government mumbo-jumbo that we've almost stopped complaining about it
– which is what made the response I received from Alaskan officials all
the more refreshing.
Phone calls to the Alaska government were met with the offer of an
interview with Lt.-Gov. Byron Mallott, who is in charge of the
transboundary mining file. The face-to-face interview was chatty and
unscripted, giving useful insights into how the problem was viewed by
the state, and the probable direction of the Alaskan government.
A cold call to Alaska Department of Natural Resources was immediately
transferred to a senior manager who answered all questions, including
those on finances, and unlike B.C. civil servants, could be named in the
story.
B.C.'s response to media requests is perplexing given the increased importance of resource projects obtaining social licence.
Bennett initially visited Alaska in November and provoked outrage by meeting only with the Alaska Miners Association.
His return visit was an effort to placate critics by proposing an
agreement between B.C. and Alaska to give Alaskans more say in the
mine-approval process. But many remain unconvinced, and there is a
continued push for a referral to the International Joint Commission and
for up-front bonds to cover compensation if Alaskan interests are
harmed.
Marcello Veiga, a mining professor at the University of B.C., says if
mining companies are serious about avoiding conflict, then they must
establish a relationship with surrounding communities and then build
trust to reassure neighbours they are not at risk.
If trust is the key to satisfying community concerns about mining
projects, then providing timely, accurate information and ministerial
access would be a good place to start.
Source : castanet.net
Source : castanet.net