Election night 2014 was a great moment for all those in BC
who want to stop pipeline and tanker projects that threaten our coast and our
climate.
From big city mayors to small town councillors, communities
up and down the coast elected local leaders who promised to work in office to
stop the Enbridge and Kinder Morgan pipelines. Vancouver, Burnaby, Victoria,
Esquimalt, Prince Rupert and Smithers all elected mayors who are opposed to tar
sands pipelines.
In the Vancouver Island community of Sooke, 70% of
residents voted YES to a referendum question that commits the district to
opposing the Kinder Morgan pipeline.
Across the province, fossil fuel projects and community
control over environmental decision-making proved to be a defining issue in
many local races. Although traditionally considered federal and provincial
matters, this year’s municipal election campaign saw many candidates speaking out
about the risks oil, coal and LNG transport could bring to their area, and
demanding a greater say in the decision-making process. It was a telling sign
of how concerned communities are about this issue, and how ignored they feel by
other levels of government.
At Georgia Strait Alliance, we contributed to the debate by working in selected strategic
locations around the Strait: Nanaimo, Parksville, Gibsons and the Sunshine
Coast. We sent questionnaires to all registered candidates in these
locations – 125 in total – asking their views on the Kinder Morgan pipeline as
well as oil spill risk and response capacity. We circulated candidates’ replies
to our supporters via email and published them on our website and social media,
encouraging people to get informed, ask questions at all-candidates’ meetings
and above all, get out and vote.
You can
find the full survey results here. The vast majority of candidates who
responded to our survey were opposed to the Kinder Morgan expansion project,
did not feel their communities had adequate resources to prepare for an oil
spill, and were concerned about the recent decision by the National Energy
Board to overrule the City of Burnaby’s bylaws to allow Kinder Morgan to
conduct surveying work on Burnaby Mountain. Most also said that if they were
elected, they would work to ensure that residents’ views on Kinder Morgan are
heard by the federal authorities who will ultimately decide the project’s
outcome.
We were thrilled that when the votes were counted, many of
these candidates were chosen to lead in their communities – particularly on the
Sunshine Coast, where 65% of those who completed our survey were elected – and
we look forward to working with municipalities around the Salish Sea in the
coming months to ensure that community needs and voices are not ignored in this
historic debate.
No comments:
Post a Comment