Archive for the ‘Hearing Info’ Category

Hearing’s final days

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

 Here’s the schedule, starting tomorrow at the High River Memorial Centre (128 -5th Ave West, High River AB T1V 1M3):

Thursday, Jan. 29

8:30 am - Curtis Bartlett, Big Loop Cattle Co. Ltd.

2:00 pm - Gary Follensbee, Compton Petroleum

 

Friday, Jan.30

8:30 am - David Hermanson and Kristi Beunder, Alternative routes

2:00 pm - Cam Gardner, MD of Ranchlands

 

Saturday, Jan 31

8:30 am - To be determined.

Hearing resumes Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Friday, January 16th, 2009

The hearing starts off Tuesday with Keith Lefthand from the Eden Valley Reserve testifying. He is to be followed by Larry Dayment testifying on animal health concerns. Following is the bulletin from the ERCB:

The Petro-Canada Sullivan Hearing Dates are set on the following dates at the High River Memorial Centre (128 -5th Ave West, High River AB T1V 1M3):

 • Tuesday, January 20, 2009 (commencing at 9:00am)

• Wednesday, January 21, 2009 (commencing at 9:00am)

• Thursday, January 22, 2009 (commencing at 9:00am)

• Friday, January 23, 2009 (commencing at 9:00am)

 

• Thursday, January 29, 2009 (commencing at 8:30am)

• Friday, January 30, 2009 (commencing at 8:30am)

• Saturday, January 31, 2009 (commencing at 8:30am) 

 

 

 

 

Additionally, the Board Panel will very likely be sitting late on the 29th and the 30th as required. If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact David Miles at 403.297.3582.

Hearing notes, Dec. 19th, 2008

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

Before a packed hall of more than 200 in the High River Memorial Centre, the Pekisko Group gave strongly compelling reasons that the PetroCanada should not drill sour gas wells nor build a 56-kilomere pipe line crossing 72 water courses. Throughout the morning, Southern Alberta residents heard Pekisko Group President Mac Blades of the Rocking P Ranch speak of the irreparable damage that the pipe line will cause to that highly sensitive ecological area. Francis Gardner of the Mt. Sentinel Ranch spoke of the commitment of generations of ranchers in the Pekisko area to protecting the land.

The final presenter Gordon Cartwright of the D Ranch took nearly two hours and several slides to show the history of the land as awell as the provincial and federal legislation to protect this area and the need to reconcile rangeland with oil and gas. He continually described the ecological sensitivity of the Pekisko area and the role that land plays with the first nations in that area.

The Energy Resource Conservation Board (ERCB) as well as the audience in the hall sat with focused interest for that morning period.

In the afternoon period including cross examination of the representatives of the Pekisko Group, the ERCB asked among other questions what management and control do the ranchers exercise to protect the land and what is currently being practiced. Their responses included banning All Terrain Vehicles (ATVs). Hunters allowed to hunt must park their vehicles at designated locations and proceed by horse or walk into the area. Mt. Sentinel Ranch posts a map indicating where the hunters can go.

The ERCB panel asked for the ranchers to help the panel decide what to do. It asked the ranchers if this was yet another example of “Not In My Back Yard (NIMBY)”. Francis Gardner responded that the panel needs to look at the opportunity costs. What will be the cost of the damage be if the sour gas drilling and pipe line construction does proceed? Gordon Cartwright gave the final comment to the ERCB panel by saying that we are destroying the land at a greater pace than it has been regenerating in the past 100 years. In some areas of the prairies, there is less than 5% left. We only need to look at the changes. Nature may survive, but what will be the quality of life for human beings?

Petro-Canada hearing schedule, Dec.15-19

Friday, December 12th, 2008

WHEN:

  • Mon. Dec. 15: 10-6 p.m.
  • Thurs. Dec. 18: 8:30-1 pm
  • Fri. Dec. 19: 9-5 pm.

WHERE:

Highwood Memorial Centre
128 - 5 Avenue W.
High River, AB

This is the last week of the hearing for 2008. It will reconvene sometime next year. TBD.

Hearing Update, December 9, 2008

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

Lorne Fitch said today:

There are only two areas left in the foothills of Southern Alberta from the Montana border to the Bow River that are of sufficient size and biological integrity — that is, without roads and other industrial fragmentation — where we can see what the world was like before we started the massive changes that have happened to the rest of it. One is the Whaleback which has been made a heritage rangeland to keep it in a pristine and unfragmented state. This area — the headwaters region of Pekisko and Willow Creeks — falls into the same category.  It is the place where things begin.

The pipeline would mean the loss of this area. It would be like losing one of the gems in your wedding ring.