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Halting pipeline would hurt First Nations, chief says

VANCOUVER — Cancellation of the Trans Mountain pipeline would cost B.C. First Nations hundreds of millions of dollars in benefits, job training, and employment and business opportunities, according to Cheam Chief Ernie Crey.
Chief Ernie Crey of the Cheam First Nation
Chief Ernie Crey of the Cheam First Nation is the leading pro-pipeline voice among First Nations.

VANCOUVER — Cancellation of the Trans Mountain pipeline would cost B.C. First Nations hundreds of millions of dollars in benefits, job training, and employment and business opportunities, according to Cheam Chief Ernie Crey.

Crey has emerged as a leading voice for the First Nations that stand to benefit from the project, calling out environmentalists for “red-washing” their fight against the $7.4-billion expansion of the pipeline between Edmonton and Burnaby.

“We have a vigorous environmental movement in B.C. and they have learned that they can use Aboriginal communities to advance their agenda,” he said.

Grand Chief Stewart Phillip of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs has joined public protests against the expansion, but that does not mean all First Nations oppose it, Crey said.

“We are a member of the union, but no one speaks for the Cheam on the pipeline but our council,” Crey said.

The Cheam are one of 43 First Nations that have mutual-benefit agreements with Trans Mountain — reportedly worth more than $300 million — that offer skills training for employment, business and procurement opportunities, and improvements to local infrastructure.

Primary contractors and First Nations can also jointly bid on pipeline work. Cheam members are engaged in security work along the pipeline with Securigard, he said.

“Our young councillors negotiated with Kinder Morgan for two years to get that agreement for the Cheam,” Crey said in an interview. “This is no payoff, we negotiatied hard for what we got.”

Premier John Horgan could do real financial harm to First Nations in B.C. by frustrating the pipeline project, he said.

“If this project doesn’t go through, it will hurt our people,” Crey said on Facebook.

“It appears that Premier Horgan is prepared to actively undermine the prosperity of First Nations in B.C.”

Crey is a co-chair of the Indigenous advisory and monitoring committee, a 13-member group funded by $64 million in federal money to monitor construction of the pipeline.

As part of its application to the National Energy Board, which approved the project, Trans Mountain engaged with more than 130 First Nations and other indigenous groups over several years.

The construction phase “will reach the equivalent of 15,000 jobs per year, followed by the equivalent of a further 37,000 direct, indirect and induced jobs per year of operations,” according to Trans Mountain.

“We recognize the project will spark ample opportunities for Aboriginal Peoples to secure employment.”

First Nations are not unanimous in their support for the Trans Mountain pipeline.

Seven First Nations — led by the Squamish and the Tsleil-Waututh on Burrard Inlet — have legal challenges to the pipeline approval making their way though the Federal Appeal Court and the Supreme Court of B.C.