Paddle To The Premier: Say No
To The Site C Dam!
First Nations, Concerned
Community Members to Rally Against Site C Dam
by UBCIC
On Sunday, September 19, First Nations and concerned community
members from the Peace River Valley will canoe to the Legislature in
Victoria to deliver a message to the Premier to stop the Site C
Dam.
The rally is being organized by four Treaty 8 First Nations - the
Doig River, Halfway River, Prophet River and West Moberly First
Nations - all of whose Treaty rights will be harmed by the project, as
well as, the Wilderness Committee, the Peace Valley Environment
Association and the Sierra Club of BC.
Featuring special guest speakers David Suzuki, First Nation
Leaders and others is planned to take place on the lawn of the
Legislative Buildings in Victoria, B.C., commencing at 10:00 AM. The
rally is aimed at raising public awareness about the destructive
impacts that the Site C project will have in northern BC, should the
project be allowed to proceed. Popular local musical bands and First
Nation drummers will accompany the event.
"Concerned British Columbians need to stand up now to make
others, especially the BC Government, aware of how this so-called
"green and clean" dam will impact on our Treaty 8 rights, as
well as the interests of all British Columbians," said Tribal
Chief Liz Logan of the Treaty 8 Tribal Association. "This is the
third major dam project on the Peace River." she said, "If
it goes ahead, it will destroy valuable river and wetland ecosystems,
both in the Peace River Valley and further downstream in the Athabasca
and Mackenzie Deltas."
Site C will impact on Treaty 8 land in northern BC, the home of
several First Nations. These lands have been utilized by the Treaty 8
First Nations to practice traditions, including hunting, trapping, and
fishing, for generations. The project will destroy wildlife habitat,
7000 acres of prime agricultural land and, even people's homes.
The dam would submerge key calving grounds for moose and disrupt
bull trout migration while creating a barrier blocking wildlife at the
narrowest waist of the continentally important Yellowstone to Yukon
Corridor.
The rally will be a powerful end to the week's events concerning
Site C. On September 16-17 First Nations leaders, from across BC,
Alberta and the Northwest Territories, and several concerned
conservation groups will gather for a Summit in Fort St John to
address the Site C issue, and draft a joint statement about the
project and its impacts. Following the Summit, buses and vans filled
with concerned members of the local community will be leaving Fort St.
John and will journey to Victoria, where they will paddle down the
Gorge Waterway to deliver the statement in birch bark containers
harvested within the proposed Site C Dam's flood zone. The leadership
of all three political parties have been invited to receive the
statement and to witness the stand against the project.
Concerned citizens from southern BC are invited to attend the
rally to learn about the folly of the Site C proposal and to show
their support for the Treaty 8 First Nations and Peace Valley
residents
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If you'd like more information or to schedule an interview with
Tribal Chief Liz Logan, please call 1-250-321-1296 or email
lIogan@treaty8.bc.ca
For information about the Paddle & Rally in Victoria: Tria
Donaldson, Pacific Coast Campaigner, Wilderness Committee:
250-388-9249 or go to
www.wildernesscommittee.org
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