BC 2014 Toxic Mine Tailings Disaster Deeply Concered Gov. - Planned Mines Might Have Permit Problems
In the hours after the 2014 Mount Polley mine disaster, authorities were already concerned laws had been broken and the premiers office was worried fallout from the tailing pond breach would get in the way of other planned mines, documents provided to The Tyee reveal. Almost three years after the disaster, and weeks away from a deadline to lay charges under B.C.s environment act, no charges have been laid and no fines levied.
The governments initial reaction to the dams collapse is revealed in hundreds of pages of emails and other communications obtained through a freedom of information request and provided to The Tyee by Jessica Ross, an independent researcher and member of the BC Freedom of Information and Privacy Association. Ross said she filed the FOI request almost three years ago and only received the documents July 4.
An email exchange between Staff Sgt. Kelly Dahl of the provinces Conservation Officer Service major investigations unit and Sgt. Richard Lebeuf of the Williams Lake RCMP documents raised concerns laws had been broken.
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Premier Christy Clarks then deputy chief of staff Michele Cadario raised concerns other proposed mine developments could be slowed by the disaster. Was there anything that could have been done that wasnt to prevent this situation are there better standards employed elsewhere that we should look at? she asked in an email to a host of staffers, including communications people. We have a few new mines coming on stream and we dont want anything to get in the way of that, she wrote.
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https://thetyee.ca/News/2017/07/14/Mount-Polley-Disaster-Government-PR-Response/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_content=071517-2&utm_campaign=editorial-0717