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January 2015 Best Cities for Work in B.C.

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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bcbusiness.ca January 2015 BCBusiness 71 of November to give a speech at the annual Alaska Miners Association convention, as well as to meet with politicians and commercial fisher- men: "I think there has been damage to the reputation of mining in B.C. and Canada." Like government officials, the Mining Association of BC ( MABC) has been besieged by calls about Mount Polley. But Karina Brino, MABC president and CEO, says any Mount Polley backlash that results in lon- ger, more cumbersome permitting processes would be unwelcome. " MABC is a strong advocate that all natural resource ministries have the resources necessary to carry out their permitting and First Nations consultation obligations in an effec- tive and timely manner," she says. "Delays in the assessment and per- mitting process can impact private sector investment, job creation and, ultimately, the economic recovery that the mining sector is poised to provide." However, there's no doubt that Mount Polley has sent a tremor through the boardrooms of min- ers across Canada. Toronto-based Seabridge Gold submitted a 35,000- page application to the B.C. Envi- ronmental Assessment Agency for its remote KSM project near the Alaskan Panhandle before receiv- ing its environmental certificate on July 30. Five days later, the Mount Polley dam broke, unleashing a media storm and forcing Seabridge to sit down once again with its First Nation partners and other stake- holders to discuss and review any engineering concerns. KSM has a projected production life of 52 years with an estimated $42 billion in total GDP contribution. Brent Murphy, KSM's VP of environmental affairs, says the company has now volun- tarily committed to an independent third-party review of all operations for the mine's lifetime. "We're very confident in our plan, but the mining industry now has a duty to win back public confidence after Mount Polley," Murphy says. "Earning social licence is an ongoing process." ■

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