First Nation trying to stop $453M Manitoba-Minnesota power line project
WINNIPEG — A Manitoba Indigenous community is taking the province to court over a $453-million power transmission project it says it wasn’t properly consulted on before construction started last summer.
The Sagkeeng First Nation is to argue in Winnipeg Court of Queen’s Bench on Wednesday for a judicial review of the province’s decision to give Manitoba Hydro a licence to build a 213-kilometre, 500-kilovolt line to Minnesota.
“When our ancestors signed the treaties, they agreed to share their land, not give it away,” Chief Derrick Henderson said in a news release. “Manitoba and Hydro need to learn that they have to treat our people with respect. It is not respectful for Manitoba to treat First Nations as a nuisance to be disposed of in a sham consultation process.”
The First Nation’s lawyer, Corey Shefman, said construction should stop until the province meets its duty to consult First Nations which will be affected. The project should also go through the environmental approval process again, he said.