Chamber adds voice to drilling opposition

By Mabell, Dave on February 27, 2014.

Dave Mabell

LETHBRIDGE HERALD

[email protected]

There’s new opposition to a Calgary company’s plans to drill for oil in Lethbridge. The Lethbridge Chamber of Commerce has taken a stand against Goldenkey Oil’s bid to drill exploratory wells near new housing developments on the city’s westside.

In a statement released Wednesday the business organization is calling on the Conservative government to order a moratorium on all resource drilling inside urban centres.

If the government allows Goldenkey to proceed, it warns, it will have “a profound negative economic impact on the community as a whole.”

“Resource development in urban areas will result in significant negative economic and community impact,” the chamber’s board of directors warns.

The safety setbacks required in drilling zones will leave land in those areas “sterilized for urbanization purposes,” it adds.

The declaration of opposition, released by chamber president Bruce Galts, came after debate at the organization’s board of directors meeting. It also cited health and safety concerns, hazardous products trucking and adverse impacts on real estate values in its detailed statement.

“The health and safety of people in neighbouring areas of drilling activity are a top consideration of the chamber and the community,” it says. “Fact-based review of the potential risks and mitigating measures must be up for public review when drilling within a city boundary.”

Disruption of the city’s development plans and real estate market are key considerations as well, it suggests. When wells are drilled, the chamber says land will be needed for storage facilities, pipelines and safety setbacks.

“This will significantly impact the planning of future roads, homes, schools and commercial property,” it points out.

“The financial impacts to landowners and the city will be significant and should be one of the primary considerations in the approval process.”

Large areas of west Lethbridge could be isolated by the oil industry, the chamber says. Longterm plans for such projects as the Chinook Trail and other arterial roadways would also be disrupted, along with plans for new watermains, storm and sanitary sewer systems.

If Goldenkey’s first three exploratory wells are deemed successful, chamber members say, the company will likely apply for permits to drill more. That could leave large areas of west Lethbridge, the city’s fastest-growing area, “unavailable for urbanization.”

If any drilling plans are approved, the organization says a disaster response plan must be ready before any work begins. The company and the city should also have an agreement on access routes and their costs of maintenance, it adds.

City council, the real estate industry and the city’s public and Catholic school boards have also voiced strong opposition to the Goldenkey proposals.

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TransAlta Corp. accused of manipulating electricity market

Calgary company denies allegations

 By Darcy Henton, Calgary Herald February 26, 2014

EDMONTON — Alberta’s electricity market watchdog has accused TransAlta Corp. of manipulating the market by shutting down its power plants at peak times to drive up prices.

The Market Surveillance Administrator (MSA) filed the accusations before the Alberta Utilities Commission (AUC) on Monday, claiming TransAlta “undermined the integrity of the Alberta wholesale electric energy market by engaging in anti-competitive conduct.”

It claims that on four occasions in 2010 and 2011, TransAlta shut down power plants during hours of high demand “for the purpose of increasing the pool price,” according to the documents filed with the commission.

“TransAlta’s strategy created market volatility, increased forward prices and consequently caused some competitors to become less competitive,” the documents state. “Other purchasers of electric energy in the power pool, such a residential, retailers or industrial loads would also have been affected.”

If the accusations are upheld, it could result in the largest fine ever in Canada’s only fully-deregulated electricity market. The commission has the authority to adjudicate the case and levy fines of up to $1 million per day and to require the offending utility to reimburse other market participants and consumers for their losses.

TransAlta has denied the allegations and filed a complaint against the MSA, alleging the watchdog failed to act fairly and responsibly in the matter. It called the MSA investigation “haphazard and contradictory,” saying the watchdog initially portrayed the conduct as “onside” before eventually calling it “completely offside.”

“The MSA failed to realize that as a market watchdog, it has a duty to be fair and forthright,” TransAlta states in a complaint it sought unsuccessfully to keep confidential.

TransAlta spokeswoman Stacey Hatcher said the utility is asking the AUC to look at all the facts and make a determination.

“TransAlta is very firm and very committed that we followed all the appropriate protocols,” she said. “We believe there has been some lack of clarity in the marketplace.”

Hatcher said the plant shutdowns were all for maintenance, operations or safety reasons.

“We’re looking forward to a full and fair hearing from the AUC,” she said. “We do stand behind our employees and we do stand behind our conduct and we will defend it.”

The Calgary-based power producer and transmission company, was previously fined $370,000 for breaking market rules in November 2010 by restricting electricity imports 31 times over eight days to create an artificial shortage and increase power prices. The fine, which stemmed from a negotiated settlement, drew protests from critics who said a $5-million penalty would be more appropriate.

AUC spokesman Jim Law said the commission hasn’t yet decided whether to hear the complaints separately or together, and no date has been set, but he said the process will be open and transparent.

Wildrose critic Joe Anglin said similar allegations in other jurisdictions would be heard in court — not in front of a quasi-judicial tribunal — and the consequences, if there are convictions, would be more severe than paying fines.

“That’s what is missing in the policing of our electricity system,” he said.

Anglin said the utility’s actions, if confirmed by the AUC, would have affected many consumers.

“This really hurts the average Albertan: senior citizens, people on fixed incomes, people with low incomes. It’s a crushing blow to businesses that have high, high energy costs, that don’t even qualify for fixed contracts.”

He said the ministers responsible for the electricity system keep saying the system is functioning well, but the allegations suggest “the system is not only broken, but has been broken for awhile.”

“It’s a complete disaster,” Anglin said. “They’ve got to get their heads out of the sand.”

[email protected]

© Copyright (c) The Calgary Herald
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City council information session on urban drilling draws large crowd

February 24, 201411:33 pm

LETHBRIDGE – After months of inquiries and controversy, Lethbridge residents were given answers to some of their questions surrounding oil and gas development within municipal limits.

Lethbridge City Council hosted a Community Issues Committee at the Yates Memorial Theatre Monday night with a number of expert panelists.

The meeting comes after months of public outcry over Calgary-based GoldenKey Oil’s potential plans to drill three exploratory wells on the west side.

Mayor Chris Spearman says while council is opposed to the proposed project, the evening was about learning more on urban drilling in general.

“Right now it’s GoldenKey Oil but it might be somebody else next time,” he says.

Among the panelists at the meeting was a representative with the Alberta Energy Regulator, the sole agency that either approves or denies such energy projects in Alberta.

A spokesperson with the AER, Ryan Bartlett, says the organization looks at every aspect of public safety when considering at a proposal.

“We make sure if any approval is done it’s only if the resource can be developed in a way that will protect the environment, public and resource itself,” he adds.

Speaking to drilling processes, a professor of geophysics from the University of Alberta told the large crowd it’s hard to analyze the risks.

“There have been hydraulic fracturing going on for 60 to 70 years and usually it’s not that much of a problem. The issues have become now the usage of the water, could you induced seismicity, but there’s a lot we still don’t know and need to study.” Dr. Doug Schmitt explains.

GoldenKey oil is yet to officially submit an application to the AER.

Spearman says council has invited the company to meet with them, and will likely use the information they garnered at the meeting with plans moving forward.

“This is an issue that we’ve already heard about twice in Calgary…so now the third incident is happening in Lethbridge and it’s an issue that’s not going away,” he adds.

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THE DRILLING STOPS HERE

By Simmons, Garrett on February 16, 2014.

Group mounts letter campaign over GoldenKey plans

Judy Westcott

For the herald

Concerned citizens gathered for a letter writing campaign Saturday in hopes of sending a strong message to government and industry officials that oil well drilling should not be allowed within the municipal boundaries of the City of Lethbridge.

Held at McKillop United Church, the campaign was organized by The Black Spots, a local citizen group that formed recently in response to a proposal by Goldenkey Oil to seek permission from the Alberta Energy Regulator (AER) to drill three oil wells on privately-owned land in West Lethbridge. The City of Lethbridge has no jurisdiction over oil and gas drilling within its urban boundaries. Drilling approvals are exclusively within the jurisdiction of the AER and public consultations are not mandatory.

“This letter campaign allows citizens to come together and discuss their concerns,” says Sharon Prenevost, a spokesperson for The Black Spots. “It can also provide a little comfort and hope to citizens who are feeling completely hopeless about the situation.”

She says the proposal by Goldenkey Oil to drill three sour wells within the urban boundaries of the city has “touched a nerve” in the community.

“The government tells us not to worry, but we do because of the many issues that have arisen due to fracking procedures over the years,” Prenevost says. “We want to have buffer zones created around urban areas, not just in Lethbridge, but all over the country.”

Residents attending the letter writing campaign were provided with information on mineral rights and drilling procedures, the political process involved in the approval of drilling applications and news articles for background information.

“We’re trying to sort fact from fiction, but when it comes to fracking, it’s very difficult,” Prenevost says. “Companies regard certain information, like what chemical cocktails they are using, as industry secrets.”

Prenevost says that although Saturday’s event was organized by The Black Spots, they were supported by other local groups such as the No Drilling Lethbridge movement and the Mission and Social Action Committee of McKillop United Church, which compiled a list of concerns for letter writers to reference as well as hosting the event.

Some of the concerns being raised include public safety from air emissions, possible water and soil contamination, an increase in the use of residential roads by industrial vehicles, noise and light pollution and the transportation of hazardous materials through residential neighborhoods and high traffic roadways.

Prenevost says a major concern for many residents is the lack of an emergency response plan for the evacuation of the 33,000 residents of West Lethbridge if required.

“In 2012, a disaster scale grass fire fueled by high winds made us very aware of the challenges facing an evacuation,” she says.

Letter writers were encouraged to address their concerns to Alberta Premier Alison Redford, the AER, Goldenkey Oil, local MLAs, members of the Opposition Parties, the provincial ministers for the Environment, Energy, Health and Transporation and the mayor and council of the City of Lethbridge.

Besides the letter writing campaign, The Black Spots have been holding public demonstrations throughout the city and have been circulating a petition to have urban drilling banned.

She says the group will continue to raise awareness of the issue and are looking for inspiration from other interest groups, such as the Knitting Nannies of Australia.

“We’re just a group of concerned citizens who feel we have to take action,” Prenevost says.

“This is an issue that affects all of us.”

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Urban Drilling In Alberta Should Be Banned: NDP

CP  |  By The Canadian Press Posted: 02/06/2014 11:22 pm EST  |  Updated: 02/07/2014 6:59 pm EST

LETHBRIDGE, Alta. – The Alberta New Democrats are calling on the provincial government to ban all drilling in urban areas.

NDP Leader Brian Mason spoke with Lethbridge media Thursday just two kilometres from where GoldenKey Oil wants to drill three exploratory wells.

Mason said the Tory government is dragging its feet when it comes to addressing the issue.

He also wants the Conservatives to undertake an independent, scientific review of fracking, its impact on water quality, air quality and community safety.

In addition, the NDP is calling for the government to implement independent pre-fracking groundwater monitoring and a scientific assessment of river inflow needs before water allocation decisions are made.

Energy Minister Diana McQueen said Mason’s comments show the NDP’s “complete lack of knowledge about how oil and gas development is regulated in the province.”

McQueen said the Alberta Energy Regulator independently evaluates all applications, urban or rural, to ensure safe and responsible development.

GoldenKey Oil has secured mineral rights from Alberta Energy in an undeveloped area of southwest Lethbridge and will be seeking permission from the Alberta Energy Regulator to drill three oil wells on privately owned land within city limits.

The proposed wells are classified as sour wells, as they would be drilled through a sour geological formation, but would produce from a non-sour zone.

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Alberta Fracking An Unregulated Free-For-All, Licence Data Shows: NDP

CP  |  By Dean Bennett, The Canadian Press Posted: 02/04/2014 1:27 pm EST  |  Updated: 02/04/2014 5:59 pm EST

EDMONTON – Alberta New Democrats say newly released documents show fracking has become an unregulated free-for-all in the province with no regard for the impact on groundwater or on people’s health.

NDP Leader Brian Mason presented information Tuesday provided under freedom-of-information laws that shows the number of hydraulic fracturing licences granted by the province soared 647 per cent last year to 1,516.

Mason said the amount of water allocated and used for fracking has increased even faster.

“Most Albertans don’t realize that fracking in Alberta is almost completely unregulated,” he told a legislature news conference.

“And it is increasing on a dramatic scale without any understanding of what the potential consequences will be.”

He said the water loss alone is sobering, with more than 17 million cubic metres used in 2013.

“This is an enormous amount of groundwater. It’s pumped into the ground, it’s polluted by chemicals and it’s never seen again.”

Fracking blasts pressurized water and chemicals into underlying rocks to release trapped natural gas and oil.

It has changed the game on North American resource extraction in the last decade — fuelling an oil and gas boom in North Dakota and delivering a 15 per cent overall production increase south of the border, according to Alberta government data.

It has also resulted in a backlash from environmentalists and from homeowners who live near fracking sites. Their main concern is polluted groundwater and aquifers.

In Lethbridge, homeowners and city council are fighting an application by Calgary-based Goldenkey Oil to drill three wells using vertical hydraulic fracturing within city limits and within one kilometre of where people live.

The legislature members for Lethbridge — Progressive Conservatives Bridget Pastoor and Greg Weadick — have told residents they are making sure concerns are heard. Mason said they two need to go farther and actively fight the development.

“They’re mealy-mouthed hedging on the whole question.”

Fracking has brought with it controversy in other provinces. Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia and Quebec are re-evaluating its benefits versus the consequences of environmental damage.

Mason said it’s too late for a moratorium on fracking in Alberta.

“The horse is kind of out of the barn. It’s a mainstream activity now.”

He suggested Premier Alison Redford’s government should undertake an independent scientific review of hydraulic fracturing and use independent groundwater monitoring before further projects get approved.

Environment Minister Robin Campbell disagreed with Mason. He said in a news release that “Alberta has strict regulations that apply to all oil and gas development regardless of the technology being used.”

Campbell also said concerns of environmental damage have not been borne out.

“To date, there has not been a documented case of hydraulic fracturing fluids contaminating a domestic water well in Alberta. For anybody to claim that the water supply is at risk is completely false,” said Campbell.

“All water licence applications are carefully reviewed to ensure no significant impacts to our environment or other water users.”

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AltaLink completes investigation of dead ducks near Oldman Dam

The Pincher Creek Voice

Chris Davis

As reported here on January 8, 2014, a number of dead ducks were found underneath AltaLink electricity transmission lines adjacent to Highway 785 south of the Oldman River Dam (click here for that story).

AltaLink spokesman Scott Schreiner says the company has completed their investigation of situation. Schreiner confirmed 345 dead birds were found, 244 mallards and 1 grey partridge. “We believe it was a combination of high winds and lowered visibility that caused them to hit the lines  where bird diverters were in place, and where they weren’t,” said Schreiner.

To attempt to mitigate the situation Schreiner said AltLink was at the site yesterday installing new wind diverters on new lines and on lines that already had diverters. He also said AltaLink would be increasing patrols “from an environmental persepective” in the area to monitor the situation. Bird diverters are devices that attach to power lines. They flap in the wind to warn the birds that the hard to see lines are there.

Schreiner said that AltaLink’s Avian Protection Plan was the first of its kind by a utility company in Canada. “One of the things we do is identify high risk areas,” he said, adding that AltaLink installs diverters and patrols such areas to monitor environmental impact.

Schreiner said the power line was strung in spring of 2012 and has been powered since later that same year “and this is the first incident of this type that we’re aware of”.

“It’s certainly unique in terms of our entire system.  We take it seriously, which is why we launched the investigation the day after we heard about it.”

Retired scientist and area environmentalist David McIntyre took pictures of the site on December 31, 2013 one of which is republished at the top of this article. He’s long made known his opposition to the positioning of the power lines in question and also acts as an informal spokesman for some of those concerned about the situation. McIntrye said he had an informal meeting with biologists from AltaLink and Stantec last Monday to discuss their findings, which McIntrye said mirrored his own observations.

“I didn’t go to the site with the biologists, but we were on site-separated by several hundred meters, one day at the same time, and concurred that within one half-hour period, more than 2,000 ducks flew overhead, and directly over the problematic, currently strung, transmission line, under which hundreds of dead ducks were found.”

According to McIntyre there are approximately 5,000 mallards and 5,000 Canadian geese below the dam on any given day in the winter months. Problematic for him is that the transmission line west of 785 and the one under construction roughly eastward which parallels the river valley is in the direct line of flight for fowl flying to and from adjacent grain fields. “You didn’t have to be a biologist to see we have a tremendous number of birds wintering this area and that’s going to be a big problem for them. I find it amazing that AltaLink would build lines there if they had done any kind of environmental assessment. The red blinkers should be going.”

Mcintrye believes this was not an isolated incident. “It’s crystal clear to me it was multiple collisions. There may have been many incidents. Unless it lands on someone’s doorstep, we may never hear about it.” He also voiced his concern about the effect the situation could have on eagle migrations in spring, when “thousands of Golden Eagles migrate up the crest of the Livingstone Range”.  He worries they will be attracted to dead ducks as a source of food, “And now it’s more than a dead duck issue.”

Eyewitness accounts

In early December we began receiving reports by local citizens about dead duck sightings, but were unable due to inclement weather to verify those claims at that time.After publishing our story on the situation on January 8, 2014 I solicited and received feedback via Facebook from eyewitnesses to the situation. “Its such a sad sight to see. Every day on my way to work,” said Tina Jay Spear. “There seems to be more and more each time. We saw a lot throughout November and December. We thought one day it was raining birds, on one of our drives a couple of ducks fell right in front of us as we were driving. Scared me, what a sight to see.”

“I remember driving to the Heritage acres area in December and seeing all the dead ducks too. They where all over the place. I will update you tomorrow on what the exact day it was,” said Dylon Barber.

“The other day me and my wife were driving by there going home, we seen over 12 dead birds alongside the ditch,” said Patrick Bad-Eagle.

“(I) Drive past there everyday going to and from work, this has been going on since late November. The ducks are down in the river valley and they fly up the coulees. Once they come up over the road hwy 785 on extremely windy days, they get blown back into the power lines. Everyday we have +70 km/hr winds you will see the dead ducks,” said Robert Dale Plante. “This has not been one or two events, this is a daily issue on extremely windy days.”
Related story:

Ducks found dead under transmission lines near Oldman dam

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Power bills will continue to rise

By Dave Mabell on January 14, 2014.

 LETHBRIDGE HERALD

[email protected]

Think you’re paying too much for electricity now? Things are only going to get worse, warns Mayor Chris Spearman.

“This is just the tip of the iceberg ” he told city council members Monday, after a detailed briefing from the city’s electrical utility manager.

Alberta’s electrical transmission costs have doubled over the last five years, manager Otto Lenz pointed out.

“And transmission charges could double again in the next five years,” he predicted.

With Lethbridge power bills expected to increase as much as 6.3 per cent per year, Lenz told council three of the city’s largest power users are already hoping to build their own power stations and go “off grid.” The impact, at least in the short term, would be to download more costs on Lethbridge homeowners and small businesses.

The soaring costs of power transmission, he said, are a result of the Conservative government’s decision to build two high-voltage transmission lines in central Alberta. They’ll cost $2 billion, he said, and the government has ruled ordinary Albertans should pay for their construction instead of the companies’ investors.

The two north-south lines’ capacity will be far in excess of need, Lenz said. They’ll be of little benefit to Lethbridge-area customers.

“It’s like running a Via Rail train between Coaldale and Lethbridge, for one passenger.”

Lethbridge officials have often made that point during presentations to the government-appointed energy regulators, he said.

“It’s fallen on deaf ears.”

Responding to council members’ questions, Lenz said while large, power-hungry companies are allowed to generate their own power, the city’s electrical utility is not. Yet Calgary and Edmonton are permitted to own large electric utilities which are allowed to generate.

Medicine Hat has to abide by almost none of the regulations that hamstring Lethbridge, he added. But Lethbridge, as a “wire services provider,” is required to provide service to local customers who do not want to sign a contract with Enmax or one of its retail competitors.

While it’s intended to operate on a break-even basis, he said the utility has lost as much as $2.8 million on those customers one year – when power prices spiked after a train derailed into Lake Wabamun, site of a major power plant west of Edmonton.

Year-end results for 2013 were a loss of about $1.5 million, he said, due to unexpected hikes in transmission charges set by the Alberta Electrical System Operator. The utility transferred $9.7 million to the city’s coffers, however, as a return on the city’s investment in electrical facilities.

In the power distribution tariff proposed for 2014, Lenz said the utility could resume a break-even course despite slight reductions to access fees for distribution.

A typical homeowner using 650 kilowatt-hours could see the bill rise from $112.66 to $117.64 per month, he estimated. A large retailer using about 35,000 kilovolts would see last year’s $5,472 bill increase to $5,841 per month.

The city recently created a higher-impact residential rate, Lenz said, in response to some owners’ decisions to use heat pumps for geothermal heating, or plug-in electric cars. Their monthly bills could advance to $466 for 3,500 kilowatt hours, up from $446 last year.

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Altalink investigating hundreds of dead ducks along power corridor in Pincher Creek

By Michael Platt, QMI Agency

Eagles and ravens don’t eat wings, apparently — and that’s made counting the carnage in Alberta’s latest duck disaster all too easy.

Dozens of dismembered mallard wings are all that greeted retired forest scientist David McIntyre as he investigated reports of a mass bird kill just north of Pincher Creek.

There, beside a newly-built power transmission line, McIntyre found an ongoing banquet for local avian scavengers, including seven eagles, a dozen ravens and a hawk — all of them gorging on dead ducks, scattered beneath the wires.

They eat the duck, and leave the wings behind.

“It appears obvious that the line’s placement, directly between a key waterfowl staging area and adjacent grain fields, couldn’t have been planned more effectively if killing waterfowl had been its primary objective,” said McIntyre, a well-known environmentalist in the area.

“The biggest thing to me in all of this, is how in the world was such an obvious threat allowed to take place?”

The trail of leftover wings, some fresh and others dating back over what McIntyre calls “a protracted period of time,” adds up to hundreds of dead birds — the majority of them mallard ducks, though he counted a Canada goose and a gray partridge among the corpses.

Calling it “an avian slaughterhouse”, McIntyre says the under-construction transmission lines — owned by AltaLink — are in the flight path of thousands of birds using the Oldman River and Oldman Reservoir, and waterfowl apparently collide with the wires on a regular basis.

“This appears to be a big problem — something that is not a one-time deal, and I believe it will be an ongoing killer so long as it’s in place,” said McIntyre.

“In a case like this, we could decimate or wipe out some species.”

In a province where past energy industry bird kills have resulted in massive fines and scathing indictments, an ongoing duck demise could add up to an environmental crisis for Calgary-based AltaLink, which supplies power to 85% of Albertans.

In 2012, oil-firm Syncrude was hammered with $3 million in fines for the deaths of 1,600 ducks that died in a tailings ponds near Fort McMurray in 2008, after the company was charged under federal and provincial laws for failing to keep the birds away.

And in recent years, the impact of wind turbines on bat populations in southern Alberta has led the province to establish new rules to protect flying mammals, believed to be fatally wounded both by spinning blades and changes in wind pressure.

Dead birds and bats are serious business in Alberta, and this is no different.

Officers with Alberta Fish And Wildlife have visited the scene near Pincher Creek to ensure nothing criminal is involved, including possible poaching.

With that ruled out, the case has been passed over to Alberta Sustainable Resource Development for investigation.

But the province may be following AltaLink’s own team.

Company spokesman Scott Schreiner says the company makes bird safety a priority, and the report by McIntyre will be immediately investigated.

“We found out about this incident and (Wednesday) morning we dispatched a team to walk the line and find out what’s going on,” said Schreiner.

Transmission line deaths have been an ongoing issue across North America, with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service conducting a three-year study last decade on how to prevent kills, including keeping the lines away from sensitive areas.

It may be too late to keep this badly-needed transmission line away from Alberta’s birds, but Schreiner says AltaLink does try to avoid such impacts.

“It’s always a concern and we were the first transmission company in Canada to develop an avian protection plan to reduce the potential of bird collisions,” he said.

While they can’t completely stop birds from dying, Schreiner says using tools like bird diverters — shiny plates hung from the power lines — do help.

“We do take it seriously, but with any aerial facility — whether it’s a transmission line or cell tower or skyscraper — there are bird contacts and some of those are unavoidable,” he said.

“What we try to do is mitigate it.”

[email protected]@sunmedia.ca

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Reader suggests burying transmission lines

Pincher Creek Voice, Thursday Jan 9 2014.

Terri Vidricaire, Letter to the Editor

Area residents are rightfully concerned with the carnage wrought by AltaLink’s newest power line project when hundreds of ducks are killed in a single weather event. Both AltaLink and Stantec were advised that this would be the outcome if they proceeded with their plans to traverse the sensitive watersheds and flyways in the southernmost parts of the province.

There are real concerns that, if allowed to proceed with their (yet undetermined) plans for the area between Pincher Creek and Waterton Park, the AltaLink slaughter will extend to eagles, cranes, swans and the many species of raptors that migrate through and populate the area encompassed by the Waterton Biosphere. As we explained to AESO, AltaLink and Stantec during their “community consultations”, the watersheds and cultivated fields serve as staging areas along the annual migration routes.

They connect the Waterton Reservoir to the Waterton Lakes and the areas between these serve as resting and feeding areas for multitudes of waterfowl and other migratory species. If AltaLink is allowed to proceed south of Pincher Creek towards Waterton, some of Alberta’s most pristine and sensitive lands and many types of wildlife, some protected under federal legislation, will be irreparably damaged by the close proximity of more deadly power lines. As Albertans and area residents, we have a resource worth protecting. In addition to sustaining the western heritage lifestyles of many in our ranching and farming community, the area draws over 400,000 visitors annually from around the globe.

Rather then coming up with a bandaid solution, when will AltaLink start burying the lines? Visit Reta’s website at retasite.wordpress.com for more information and to support burying power lines, because AltaLink’s fix is “not” for the birds.

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