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Author: Shaun Fluker Page 18 of 38

B.Comm. (Alberta), LL.B. (Victoria), LL.M. (Calgary).
Associate Professor.
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The Expert Panel Report on Federal Environmental Assessment: Discretion, Transparency, and Accountability

By: Shaun Fluker and Drew Yewchuk

PDF Version: The Expert Panel Report on Federal Environmental Assessment: Discretion, Transparency, and Accountability

Report Commented On: Expert Panel on the Review of Federal Environmental Assessment Processes, Building Common Ground: A New Vision for Impact Assessment in Canada

Last November, the University of Calgary’s Public Interest Law Clinic, on behalf of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS) Southern Alberta Chapter, presented to the Expert Panel responsible for Canada’s federal environmental assessment process. The presentation focused exclusively on problems with the federal environmental assessment process in Canada’s national parks under the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act 2012SC 2012 c 19 s 52 (CEAA 2012). We described that presentation here, and the full written submission to the Panel including exhibits is available here (CPAWS Submission). The Expert Panel Report, Building Common Ground: A New Vision for Impact Assessment in Canada, was released April 5, 2017. Professor Arlene Kwasniak provided some background and an overview of key aspects of the report here. CPAWS left the Expert Panel with three messages in relation to the current federal environmental assessment process in the national parks: there is (1) too much discretion; (2) not enough transparency; and (3) a complete lack of accountability. In this post, we comment on how the Report addresses each of these points.

As an overall comment, it is disappointing the Expert Panel did not specifically address environmental assessment in the national parks. The Report focuses on sustainability as the measuring stick for impact assessment: “Federal IA [impact assessment] should provide assurance that approved projects, plans and policies contribute a net benefit to environmental, social, economic, health and cultural well-being.” (at 2.1.3) While sustainability is a commendable objective generally, this commitment to sustainability and its polycentric consideration of factors is not consistent with the legislated priority of maintaining or restoring ecological integrity in the national parks. The legislated ecological integrity mandate set out in section 8(2) of the Canada National Parks Act, SC 2000 c 32 demands an assessment process which skews in favour of environmental protection over economic and other social considerations. Perhaps, however, the Expert Panel was thinking of national parks and the ecological integrity mandate in its recommendation for regional impact assessments. The Report specifically calls for regional impact assessments that address matters such as baseline conditions and thresholds for federal lands with the potential for cumulative effects problems (at 3.5).

Jurisdictional Matters Concerning Environmental Protection Orders Under the Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act

By: Shaun Fluker

PDF Version: Jurisdictional Matters Concerning Environmental Protection Orders Under the Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act

Case Commented On: Director (EAP) v Alberta (Provincial Court), 2017 ABQB 3 (CanLII)

During April and May of 2010 a significant gasoline spill occurred at a gas station located at 6336 Bowness Road in Calgary. The underground petroleum plume spread to adjacent properties, and in December 2010 the Director of Alberta Environment issued a remediation order under the Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act, RSA 2000, c E-12 (EPEA). The site is now an empty lot, and while remediation activities have been conducted there is disagreement on whether the property is fully cleaned up. Metaphorically speaking, this petroleum plume also spread to the Alberta legal system. A preliminary search in preparation for writing this comment revealed no less than 10 decisions concerning the spill: (1) the Director’s December 2010 remediation order; (2) a December 2011 decision by the Alberta Environmental Appeals Board concerning an appeal of the December 2010 remediation order (Gas Plus Inc and Handel Transport v Director (Alberta Environment), Appeals No 10-034, 11-002, 008 & 023R; (3) a revised remediation order issued in January 2012 incorporating the Board’s recommendations; (4) an Order of the Court of Queen’s Bench issued in December 2012 concerning the January 2012 revised remediation order; (5) 2 interlocutory decisions by the Court of Queen’s Bench in relation to civil proceedings concerning the spill (Floate v Gas Plus, 2015 ABQB 545 (CanLII) and Floate v Gas Plus, 2015 ABQB 725 (CanLII)); (6) a decision by the Calgary Development Authority to deny a permit to construct a new gas station on the site and a March 2015 decision by the Calgary Subdivision and Development Appeal Board dismissing an appeal of the development decision (Re SDAB2014-0146, 2014 CGYSDAB 146 (CanLII)); and (7) a decision issued in January 2017 by the Honourable Mr Justice P.R. Jeffrey quashing a mediation order issued by the Honourable Judge H.A. Lamoureux in relation to the dispute over remediation. This comment examines this most recent decision by Justice Jeffrey in Director (EAP) v Alberta (Provincial Court), 2017 ABQB 3 (CanLII), which addresses jurisdictional matters concerning environmental protection orders under EPEA and the inherent authority of the court.

Municipal Government Board Rules on Development Impacts to the G8 Legacy Wildlife Underpass in the Bow Valley

By: Shaun Fluker

PDF Version: Municipal Government Board Rules on Development Impacts to the G8 Legacy Wildlife Underpass in the Bow Valley

Case Commented On: Town of Canmore v M.D. of Bighorn No. 8, 2017 ABMGB 10

Say again? The Municipal Government Board created by the Municipal Government Act, RSA 2000, c M-26 to adjudicate on municipal affairs such as linear property assessment, annexation, subdivision, and inter-municipal disputes has ruled on a significant wildlife issue in the Bow Valley? And not just any wildlife issue – a dispute concerning the functionality of the G8 Legacy Wildlife Underpass – a key wildlife connectivity feature located just east of Canmore and built with funds provided from the G8 Economic Summit hosted in Kananaskis during June 2002. How can this be? Well really, it should not be. There is a longstanding and seemingly bitter municipal dispute ongoing between the MD of Bighorn and Canmore over urban development in the Bow Valley, and the Board has just ruled in favour of proposed development by the MD of Bighorn for the hamlet of Dead Man’s Flats. However, the dispute between the MD of Bighorn and Canmore over development is just smoke and mirrors for what is really at stake here – the integrity of the G8 Legacy Wildlife Underpass as a highly used connectivity feature that allows wildlife to avoid crossing the highway while moving through the human-congested Bow Valley. With all due respect to the members of the Municipal Government Board who heard this matter and deliberated on the issues, I think the Board accepted pie-in-the-sky solutions to a serious and escalating land use problem in the Bow Valley. In my humble opinion the Board ought to have declined jurisdiction to hear this dispute. For reasons set out below, I suggest the Lieutenant Governor in Council should refer this to the Natural Resources Conservation Board pursuant to section 4(f) of the Natural Resources Conservation Act, RSA 2000, c N-3. 

Seeking Leave to Appeal a Statutory Tribunal Decision: What Principles Apply?

By: Shaun Fluker and Drew Yewchuk

PDF Version: Seeking Leave to Appeal a Statutory Tribunal Decision: What Principles Apply?

Case Commented On: Bokenfohr v Pembina Pipeline Corporation, 2017 ABCA 40 (CanLII)

Statutory provisions which provide for an appeal from a statutory tribunal to a superior court have not received much critical attention in Canadian administrative law. In 2010 the Alberta Law Reform Institute contemplated a study on statutory appeals to the courts from adjudicative decisions, and in preparation for that study the Institute compiled an inventory of adjudicative tribunals and their statutory appeal mechanisms published in Administrative Adjudicative Decisions: Statutory Review Mechanisms. The Institute decided not to pursue this study, which is unfortunate because there is plenty of uncertainty surrounding the application of these provisions including, for example, how they operate alongside the inherent authority of a superior court to engage in judicial review of administrative decisions. That point does not concern us here, but rather our focus is on the typical legislative requirement that a prospective appellant to obtain leave or judicial permission to proceed with the statutory appeal of a tribunal decision. What principles guide the court in deciding whether to grant leave to appeal? The leave to appeal decision in Bokenfohr v Pembina Pipeline Corporation, 2017 ABCA 40 (CanLII) provides a recent illustration for the purpose of exploring this question.

Legal Designation of the New Castle Wilderness Protected Areas

By: Shaun Fluker

PDF Version: Legal Designation of the New Castle Wilderness Protected Areas

Orders in Council commented on:

Order in Council 020/2017 (amendments to South Saskatchewan Regional Plan under Alberta Land Stewardship Act)

Order in Council 021/2017 (amendments to Forest Provincial Recreation Areas Order)

Order in Council 022/2017 (designation of the Castle Provincial Park under Provincial Parks Act)

Order in Council 023/2017 (designation of the Castle Wildland Provincial Park under Provincial Parks Act)

Order in Council 024/2017 (amendments to the Public Lands Administration Regulation)

On January 20, 2017 the Lieutenant Governor in Council issued 5 Orders in Council and thereby followed thru on Alberta’s commitment announced back in September 2015 to legally protect the area in southwestern Alberta known as the Castle wilderness with a new wildland provincial park and a new provincial park. What remained to be seen back in September 2015 was what this legal protection would exactly amount to, and these Orders in Council provide us with the important details. At the time of the announcement back in September 2015 I provided some context for these new designations in At Long Last – Legal Protection for the Castle Wilderness. Collectively these Orders in Council create the Castle Wildland Provincial Park and the Castle Provincial Park effective February 16, 2017, and implement consequential amendments to existing regulations to accommodate these new designations.

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