June 14th, 2025

Chaos at the coal meeting


By Lethbridge Herald on June 13, 2025.

Premier Danielle Smith speaks to media prior to a town hall meeting on coal Wednesday evening at the Fort Macleod and District Community Hall. HERALD PHOTO BY ALEXANDRA NOAD

Alexandra Noad
Lethbridge Herald
Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

The Premier’s Coal Town Hall event Wednesday evening was described as “a gong show” by many in attendance, with several being left outside, including the media.

Hundreds of people lined the street outside the Fort Macleod and District Community Hall hours before the doors opened, many of them protesting the new coal policy the province recently approved that could potentially allow an Australian company to re-open a mine on Grassy Mountain in the Crowsnest Pass.

Prior to the event, musician Corb Lund, who has been very vocal against the coal policy since it first surfaced in 2020, said he was tired of having to continue protesting.

“It’s annoying to be fighting the same exact coal mine that the provincial government and the federal government and the courts turned down a number of times already,” said the award-winning country music artist. “But here we are.”

While many were vocally opposed to the coal policy, there were some supporters in attendance.

Bonnie Castellarin, a founding member of Citizen’s Supportive of Crowsnest Coal in the Crowsnest Pass, was one of the attendees who not only was able to make it inside, but also to share her support of the mine at the microphone.

Castellarin said many southern Albertan municipalities, including Lethbridge, Coaldale, Crowsnest Pass as well as many others, were founded on coal.

“I grew up in the Crowsnest Pass, I grew up below a coal mine and I’m nearly 74 years old,” said Castellarin. “I’m still here and that was back in the day before environmental constraints and things like that.”

She added that there would be no chance she would be in support of reopening the Grassy Mountain mine if she thought it was going to have a negative effect on her community.

Many community members questioned the government’s organization and promotion of the event, as they either found out about it through social media or via the grapevine.

“The only reason I knew about it is because my mom heard from a friend,” said one community member. “You’d think the premier is coming so close to you, you would know about that.”

Lund also commented on the last-minute timing of the event, saying it was typical of the UCP government around the issue of coal.

“Everything the government seems to do around coal is last minute,” Lund pointed out. “When they make a policy change, it’s on a Friday night before a long weekend at five o’clock, I don’t know if it’s on purpose, but most of the announcements and decisions around this whole issue seem to be very last minute.”

Right before the event, media were allowed to participate in a scrum with Premier Danielle Smith behind the community hall, but in plain view of protesters.

During the scrum, Smith said she wanted attendees to know that the province intends to extract the coal from Grassy Mountain in the most ethical and responsible way possible.

“I hope what happens this evening is people know we took to the recommendations of the Coal Policy Committee and implementing a new policy, that we are going to be banning any new open pit mines and mountaintop removal, making sure best available technology is used to manage water and where possible, start using some of the new underground mining and techniques to avoid disturbing the surface,” said Smith.

She added that coal is necessary to forge steel, which is used in items such as farm equipment, windmills and other renewable resources tools. And since the election of Donald Trump as president of the U.S., Canadians realize they need to be self-sufficient.

“We’ve got to find new markets,” said Smith. 

“We’ve got to make sure we’re developing our resources and we’ve got to do it in the most responsible way possible, because we’re the best at it in the world.”

Within a couple of minutes, a handful of vocal protesters had gathered around, kept at a distance by security. Smith then turned to them and asked for them to stop.

“You got interviews without me interrupting your interviews,” she told the crowd. “I’m just asking for the same courtesy.”

Smith then spoke about researching the high selenium levels in the Crowsnest lake and reassuring the public that it’s safe for consumption.

“We’ll be doing additional follow up research to see if we can find out the reasoning for the bioaccumulation in the fish, but we were encouraged to see the level of selenium in the water is well below what the recommended level is for drinking water standards.”

Smith also admitted the reclamation of the former mine at Grassy Mountain should have been handled better when it closed in 1960, adding that if it were to be reopened, the reclamation would be done properly.

“I think we should be concerned that 60 years ago, it was not reclaimed to a standard we would accept today and the company as part of developing the resource would also reclaim the project to a higher standard. I think that would be good for the environment and something we should encourage.”

She recommended municipalities against coal mining should follow the Crowsnest Pass’s example and hold a referendum on the issue.

Following the interview, media were denied access to the meeting itself. Organizer said the hall was already at capacity and allowing any more inside would violate fire regulations.

Many citizens expressed shock at hearing the media weren’t inside covering the meeting.

“That is just absurd to me because it’s for everybody, especially the press to cover this meeting and to get as much actual evidence about it as possible,” said one person. “So the fact that anyone is excluded or not let in or allowed an opportunity to come in and speak shows exactly the intensions of the event.”

Another mentioned how the community hall is just two blocks from an ice arena, which has a much higher capacity.

There were a couple of people were live-streaming parts of the meeting from inside the hall, and there were many disapproving groans from the crowd following the responses from the panel.

After the event, it was clear people on both sides were unhappy with the result.

One citizen who was able to go in halfway through the meeting noted that many questions were being redirected rather than answered, which added fuel to the already fiery audience.

“I think a lot of chaos in there came from the fact that people weren’t getting their questions answered cut and dried, they weren’t getting responses they liked,” the person said.

He added that, while he understood there were a lot of people who wanted to have their voice heard, the panel did a poor job of answering the questions.

Like many others, he noted how poorly the event had been executed, adding that he believed it was designed to be that way.

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IMO

“There is no high-quality coal in Grassy Mountain.”
“Japanese steel mills forced* the closures of the Tent, Grassy, Vicary and Adanac mines “due to inadequate quality and low-market value of their metallurgical coal, combined with increasing quality requirements for the modernizing steel industry.”
“The Japanese are a very polite people,”…but even they called the coal from the Crowsnest Pass “sh*t coal.”
https://www.resilience.org/stories/2021-08-17/the-world-wont-buy-albertas-second-rate-coal-experts/

*this Alberta government link is no longer accessible. Hmm…

biff

this time reclamation will be done right, says smitty: “I think we should be concerned that 60 years ago, it was not reclaimed to a standard we would accept today and the company as part of developing the resource would also reclaim the project to a higher standard. I think that would be good for the environment and something we should encourage.” lol
right, just like the mess the oil barons left behind was done right – right by them, anyway. how many times can a population be so duped? or, is that enough of this population so hate a healthy land, and are willing to make it as dead and as toxic and as ugly as desire for a few dollars and lots of recreational machines commands?
as for smitty asking for cooperation so she can speak, too bad there is so little discussion permitted in the legislature, and, of course, there are those sneaky announcements made at the end of the day ahead of weekends when folks are most likely to be focused elsewhere.

Southern Albertan

There is the thing with this potential coal all being shipped to China so that they can make substandard steel and compete with better, Canadian steel. Why would Alberta contribute to competition for Canadian steel? So much for Alberta being a Canadian ‘team player.’
It would not be a big moneymaker in revenue for Alberta, at all. It may seem that this UCP government is more fearful of legal action by their big coal company corporate friends if coal mining is stopped, completely, in Alberta. What of legal action if our environment and waters become contaminated? It could end up being a lot more in damages than paying out the coal companies. The blabbing talk re: responsible coal mining is a cruel joke and not to be trusted. Already, Crowsnest Lake is severely contaminated with high levels of coal-mining selenium, let alone contaminated waters further west into B.C. and south into the USA. What part of this would not be understood? What are we waiting for? Even more of a disaster yet?
This: and should be read by everyone. Other smart jurisdictions/countries/companies are making steel without coal.
“Do we really need coal to make steel?”
http://www.wildsight.ca/2025/02/20/do-we-really-need-steelmaking-coal/
MOST ALBERTANS do not want any kind of coal mining, in Alberta, full stop. Are the UCP going to LISTEN to THE PEOPLE?

Kal Itea

Premier Ernest Manning is Danielle Smith in drag. A master at manipulation headquartered in Three Hills, Alberta.

Learjet

Have you ever noticed how often the people with the loudest voices often possess the fewest facts. But boy… they know!

So, I wonder how many of these self-appointed Guardians of the Universe who went to Fort Macleod travelled there in a car made of steel fueled by gasoline with a plastic kayak on their roof? Or maybe rode there from Lethbridge on a bicycle made from CARBON fibre?
Hypocrisy aside, a few facts may not hurt be aware of:
First, this is not an open pit mine proposal but underground.
Second, the proponents won’t proceed if there is no demand. Hence, the harmless task of simply documenting the resource available .
Third, how many of the protesters are prepared to pay higher taxes to cover settlement costs if a mine does not go ahead? Invest in so-called “clean energy” or fund training and education to replace these high-paying jobs that will be lost.
The fact is that some of the highest quality lowest cost steel, which Canadians buy by millions of tonnes, come from China, Korea and Japan. There are trade-offs to living in a world creeping towards addressing the conflict between supporting a growing population and reducing emissions. If this requires steel for towers and plastic for wind turbine blades, a few holes in the ground seem like a reasonable trade. At this point, hundreds of family supporting jobs become gravy for your poutine.

SophieR

Oh, I get it. If you were born into a technological society, you can’t act to sustain a better future for those yet to be born.

Maybe, in your wisdom, you could parse ‘necessary’ resource connsumption and concomitant pollution from ‘unnecessary’ (i.e. luxury) impacts. Worse, pollution caused by industries that can do much better, but profit less (profit at the expense of others).

The decision is not binary.



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