Kinder Morgan pipeline debate is dividing First Nations, B.C. chief says
The debate over Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is breaking down relationships between Indigenous groups, according to the chief of one B.C. First Nation.
The debate over Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is breaking down relationships between Indigenous groups, according to the chief of one B.C. First Nation.
The Discourse, APTN News and HuffPost Canada launch #TrackingTransMountain, a database that digs into what’s really happening with Indigenous consultation for the controversial project.
The four nations that make up the Maskwacis community in Alberta will soon be given complete control over their school systems.
Alberta has passed landmark legislation giving it sweeping power to intervene in oil and gas exports…
Grand Chief Serge Simon says no one wants another Oka Crisis but rights need to be respected.
Former U.S. vice president Al Gore has waded into the Trans Mountain pipeline debate, siding…
OTTAWA – Two First Nation leaders from British Columbia will be in Houston, Tex., Wednesday…
Alberta’s Department of Justice says it will not call an inquiry into how two women, Connie Oakes and Wendy Scott were wrongfully convicted for the 2011 murder of Casey Armstrong in Medicine Hat, Alta.
APTN recently drove the 1,150 km pipeline route from Burnaby, B.C., to Edmonton, Alta in the heat of the Trans Mountain pipeline debate. Kinder Morgan said it is putting all non-essential work on hold – and gave the federal government a deadline of May 31 to clear the path, or it would pull out.