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Victory on tanker ban motion a victory for the B.C. coast

VANCOUVER, B.C. - Environmental groups are praising the vote today in the House of Commons in support of a legislated tanker ban for Canada's Pacific North Coast. The motion was put forward by Skeena-Bulkley Valley MP Nathan Cullen whose riding includes the Great Bear Rainforest and thousands of coastal jobs that depend on a healthy marine environment.

"After years spent working to protect the coast and support sustainable livelihoods, the people of British Columbia do not want the imminent risk of an oil spill to destroy it all," said Nikki Skuce of ForestEthics. "Polls show that 80 per cent of British Columbians support a tanker ban -- this vote showed that most of our politicians are listening."

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in his own words

Oil and water cannot be allowed to mix along B.C.'s stunning coastline

Vote No Tankers: A protest in Vancouver against oil tankers on B.C.'s northern coast earlier this month, hosted by Forest Ethics and the Dogwood Initiative. Photo: forestethics.org

Beneath Alaska, between the islands of Haida Gwaii and the northern British Columbia coast, is the wide but shallow Hecate Strait. Originally termed Seegaay by the Haida, Captain George Henry Richards, affixed the name Hecate to the strait in the early 1860s. Hecate was a Greek goddess associated with magic and crossroads, a governess of the wilderness and liminal regions where the spirits interact with the living.

The title has proved an appropriate one for the region. The north coast is unique, famous for its Kermode or spirit bears, a rare and regionally isolated white variant of the black bear that haunts the local forests. Even the woods themselves are rare, as temperate rainforests such as the Great Bear Rainforest cover less than one per cent of the earth's surface.

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The Mint Film Festical celebrates World Water Day with arts and activism

Mar 22 2012 - 7:00pm

Location

Royal Ontario Museum
100 Quen's Park, Toronto
Toronto, ON M5S 2C6
Canada
Phone: 416-707-1077
43° 40' 3.2592" N, 79° 23' 39.8904" W

The Mint Film Festical celebrates World Water Day with arts and activism

Tony Clarke, co-author of Blue Gold: The Battle Against the Corporate Theft of the World's Water, and Executive Director of Polaris Institute, speaks after award-winning film Spoil about the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline.  

This documentary features breathtaking images of both the wildlife and the landscape of the Great Bear Rainforest and the challenges ahead if the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline is approved. 

The evening includes comedy, musical guests, artists and more for World Water Day. 

Contact name: 
Glen Alan
Contact email: 

Six years later, it's time to end unsustainable logging in the Great Bear Rainforest

| February 24, 2012
Alert! Radio from Canadian Dimension

Should hate speech be banned? Campaign to stop Enbridge Northern pipeline, tankers from destroying B.C.'s Great Bear Rainforest

April 2, 2010
| Alert! Radio #150 - Interviews with Arthur Schafer & Art Sterrit. Headlines, around the left in seven days and Music is the Weapon.

56:48 minutes (52.01 MB)
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