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Activists fail to block Trans Mountain pipe headed for Burnaby and beyond

A protest was held on Thursday for six hours at the Port of Vancouver in Washington State by community members trying to block a rail line that is transporting pipe for the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.
Trans Mountain
This week the Trans Mountain Expansion Project announced an “immediate return to work” now that the project has been re-approved, giving contractors 30 days to mobilize equipment and commence the process of hiring workers, procuring goods and services, and developing detailed construction work plans. The city of Coquitlam is monitoring the work closely because some of the pipeline will be dug under city streets in the Pacific Reach industrial park.

A protest was held on Thursday for six hours at the Port of Vancouver in Washington State by community members trying to block a rail line that is transporting pipe for the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.

But there were no delays to Trans Mountain's operations as a result of the demonstration yesterday, the company said, as the scheduled rail delivery had already left before the demonstrators arrived.

“Trans Mountain poses a grave threat, not only to communities throughout the Salish Sea and interior Canada," said activist Nick Haas, in a news release, "but to the very stability of our global climate. We’re taking action today to keep tar sands in the ground.” 

The protest, organized by Portland Rising Tide and Mosquito Fleet, included concerned Oregonians and Washingtonians.

“We are standing in solidarity with the Indigenous tribes whose unceded territory is directly threatened by this pipeline route. We refuse to stand idly by and watch this machinery of destruction roll through our community unchallenged,” said activist Madeline Cowen.