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On Monday September 14th, Trudeau’s cabinet is meeting to plan for the return of Parliament. And we’re taking action.
This is our moment to demand bold action to build back better with a Green New Deal. Every dollar that goes to this pipeline, is a dollar that isn’t helping people and communities get through the worst economic crisis of our lifetime.
At 10:00 am PT / 1:00 PM ET on Monday, September 14th, join us for an e-rally. We will gather to hear from inspiring speakers. Then, we will digitally deliver thousands of signatures to PM Trudeau and Minister Freeland calling on them to defund TMX right at the midpoint of their cabinet ministers’ retreat. Once you sign up, we will send you all the details for how to join via Zoom on September 14th.
We might not be able to hit the streets, but we can still take action.
Sign up here:
Kayah George ‘Halth-Leah’ proudly carries the teachings of her Tulalip and Tsleil-Waututh Nations which have inspired her to become a young Indigenous and environmental leader, scholar, and activist. She has talked globally about climate justice and spread the teachings of her nations to honour and care for the earth while being a full-time student at Simon Fraser University. (She/Her pronouns)
Rebecca Keetch is an organizer with Green Jobs Oshawa and an autoworker from Oshawa who is leading the charge for climate action and workers rights in her community. Green Jobs Oshawa is a worker-led project focusing on bringing the former GM auto plant in Oshawa under public ownership and repurposing it for the social good. She remains active with her union and is a member of the Unifor Local 222 Education and Political Action Committees.
Clayton Thomas-Müller is a member of the Treaty #6 based Mathias Colomb Cree Nation. Based in Winnipeg, Clayton is a senior campaign specialist with 350.org, and a film director, public speaker and author on Indigenous rights and environmental & economic justice.
The Trans Mountain pipeline expansion is a new fossil fuel pipeline that would carry tar sands from Alberta to just outside of Vancouver, BC. Originally owned by Texas oil giant Kinder Morgan, the Government of Canada bailed the project out in 2018 when Kinder Morgan threatened to walk away, and we bought it for $5.4 billion.
Then, in early 2020, the Government released updated costs for the project. Now at nearly $13 billion and climbing, public support for the pipeline dropped as the public was told that we would need to foot this growing bill. This was all before COVID-19 hit, which no doubt has driven the cost of the project even higher.
Before Justin Trudeau bought the Trans Mountain pipeline, the project was such a bad bet that Texas oil giant Kinder Morgan walked away from the project. Here’s why:
We’re in the midst of a pandemic and on the cusp of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. Every dollar that is spent on the growing cost of this pipeline is a dollar that isn’t going to help people and communities weather this storm.
We also know that the more this project costs us, the less people want it. We need to know if Justin Trudeau is hiding these true costs because he’s worried that the public will reject the pipeline that his government bought back in 2018.
Now a talking point of governments like Justin Trudeau’s, the idea of a build back better agenda from COVID-19 is based on the concept of a Just Recovery. In Canada that means a recovery effort that follows six principles: