Ellis Ross was elected the B.C. Liberal MLA for Skeena last year, after many years as councillor and chief councillor of the Haisla Nation at Kitimat. He has long been an advocate for resource development to provide employment and lift his community out of poverty and substance abuse. Ross spent two weeks as minister for natural gas development before the NDP and B.C. Green Party combined forces to defeat the B.C. Liberal government last summer.
Black Press legislature reporter Tom Fletcher spoke with him this week about his participation in a pro-resource development rally in Vancouver today, timed to coincide with the latest protest rally in Burnaby against Kinder Morgan CanadaB次元官网网址檚 Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
TF: IB次元官网网址檝e been seeing your about the resource situation, and youB次元官网网址檙e speaking at the at Jack Poole Plaza.
ER: I was invited. Some people were talking about it and someone mentioned my name as someone who might be interested in speaking.
A lot of people were watching my videos on Facebook, and I went to the (in February) and talked about it there. Everywhere IB次元官网网址檝e gone to, people have been asking me about what I was talking about. Other speakers (in Vancouver today) will be talking about specific industries, which is great, but IB次元官网网址檒l be talking about the overall impact on our society, our elections, our government, and the economy of Canada.
TF: WeB次元官网网址檝e seen a lot of organized protests here in B.C. YouB次元官网网址檝e talked about outside influences and people in your community being recruited to oppose energy development.
ER: ItB次元官网网址檚 like a really bad Hollywood movie. Canadians being recruited as actors, and it says it right on the application form: weB次元官网网址檒l show you how to be an actor.
TF: ThereB次元官网网址檚 an application form?
ER: There is. ThereB次元官网网址檚 a number of different organizations involved, but it seems to me it branches out from the American funded organizations, like the Tides Foundation. But [the money] comes from the Hewletts, the Packards, those kinds of organizations.
Just on the surface, thereB次元官网网址檚 been indications that the money thatB次元官网网址檚 been influencing our elections has been manipulating people who have good intentions about looking at environmental standards, and overall trying to stop our resource development from reaching Asia. And after reading about all this, I wonder how deep does this go into our society? How ingrained is it in all levels of leadership, right down to First Nations leadership. Because it seems to me itB次元官网网址檚 all over the place, everywhere I look.
TF: ItB次元官网网址檚 been going on for a long time, and some of itB次元官网网址檚 legitimate. Nobody likes oil spills. Do you think kids are getting a balanced view in school?
ER: No. In the campaign to become an MLA last year, I got beat up at high schools. I was told to expect it, about education and how the B.C. Liberals and teachers donB次元官网网址檛 get along. I was shocked to see that NDP buttons were handed out in high schools.
TF: You talked about resource development there?
ER: Yes. And some of the questions that students asked me were so detailed and so technical and so professionally written, I remarked to one student, B次元官网网址榶ou know, when I was in high school, all I thought about was basketball and girls. IB次元官网网址檝e got to commend you for coming up with such a brilliant question. Even most adults couldnB次元官网网址檛 come up with that kind of a question.B次元官网网址 And there was some awkward silence.
What struck me about it all was a student body, under 18, were actually so focused on exposing me as an enemy of education. I tried to explain to them that without these resource projects, and the revenues that come with it, you donB次元官网网址檛 have the resources to pay for schools and teachers.
TF: Another LNG project quietly closed its office in Prince Rupert recently, and this leaves Kitimat, in your consituency, as the most likely to be developed?
ER: There are two of them. , through Shell, and the , the Chevron one. I always thought the two in Kitimat had the best chance, but there was such hysteria over Rupert.
TF: That was pretty well orchestrated too, with the focus.
ER: I questioned [Skeena-Bulkley Valley MP] Nathan Cullen about that. I wanted to know if heB次元官网网址檚 going to support that type of initiative, but he does support LNG, why doesnB次元官网网址檛 he come and support Kitimat projects? That was when I was Chief Councillor of the Haisla Nation.
TF: You go back to working for an LNG import terminal at Kitimat, before the shale gas boom in the mid-2000s?
ER: [Laughs] Yes.
TF: There was a this week about the next big shale gas development, in Saudi Arabia. TheyB次元官网网址檝e got big shale gas deposits too, and thatB次元官网网址檚 a dictatorship, so there wonB次元官网网址檛 be any protests there.
ER: There will be no human rights, workersB次元官网网址 rights, no environmental standards. TheyB次元官网网址檒l save so much money just on environmental standards.
TF: Are you still optimistic about the Kitimat area LNG projects? WeB次元官网网址檙e starting to see reports in the business press about a projected shortage of LNG by 2020.
ER: IB次元官网网址檝e been trying for the last 13 years to be optimistic. But the more I learn about Canadian politics, B.C. politics, the U.S. interference and competing countries, itB次元官网网址檚 hard to be optimistic. ThereB次元官网网址檚 a perfect storm of all these different initiatives at the same time, to stop LNG, Kinder Morgan, mining, forestry, increased corporate taxes, revamped environmental assessments, for one of the most difficult environmental assessments in Canada already.
It just seems like B.C. is hell-bent on keeping our resources from reaching Asia, but weB次元官网网址檙e OK with sending it to the U.S. at a discount. This doesnB次元官网网址檛 make any sense to me.
tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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