Good morning

For your information, follow-up and/or further distribution, please see the 
following news release from Coastal First Nations.


From: Bessie Brown [mailto:bbr...@coastalfirstnations.ca]
Sent: September-23-13 7:06 AM
Subject: Coastal First Nations press release
Importance: High

Coastal First Nations Launch Oil Spill Ad Campaign to Counter Harper 
Government’s Pipeline Public Relations Offensive
Re-vamped Simon & Garfunkel "Sound of Silence" commercial singles out Stephen 
Harper for upcoming decision on oil tanker traffic in BC’s coastal waters.
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (September 23, 2013) - The Coastal First Nations 
launched an oil spill ad campaign today, featuring graphic oil spill imagery, 
and singling out Prime Minister Stephen Harper as the key federal government 
decision-maker on whether or not oil tankers will ply BC's pristine coastal 
waters.
The campaign starts on the same day First Nations leaders are scheduled to meet 
with federal government officials in Vancouver.
See the commercial on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmrH4SkuE1M
“British Columbians have been very clear in their opposition to the proposed 
Northern Gateway pipeline and oil tankers in our coastal waters,” said Art 
Sterritt, Executive Director of the Coastal First Nations. “All eyes are now on 
Mr. Harper. We hope that he will respect the wishes of British Columbians and 
say no to the proposed project. “
The ad, which features Exxon Valdez Captain Joseph Hazelwood’s radio call to 
the Coast Guard, accompanied by The Sound of Silence, by Simon & Garfunkel, is 
a new version of an ad that went viral last March, provoking Natural Resources 
Minister, Joe Oliver, to claim that a similar spill could never happen in 
Canada.

The new version includes an iconic photo of a First Nations woman crying after 
witnessing the devastation of the Exxon Valdez oil spill.
The ad concludes with a simple message: “British Columbians have spoken. Will 
Stephen Harper listen?”
"The Coastal First Nations have banned oil tankers from our traditional 
territories in the Great Bear Rainforest, and we have invested more than $300 
million dollars over the past decade to establish a sustainable economy on the 
coast,” said Sterritt. "If Stephen Harper approves the Northern Gateway 
pipeline, an oil spill could wipeout all of our hard work and silence our 
communities.”
The month-long ad campaign is running on Global BC. BC is a key electoral 
battleground, and pipelines and oil tankers are likely to be a campaign issue 
in the next federal election.
Contact Information:

Art Sterritt
Executive Director, Coastal First Nations
604-868-9110


Ad Facts:

·         A major oil spill could cost Canadian taxpayers $21.4 billion

·         Job losses could total 4,379 person-years of employment

·         80% of British Columbians oppose oil tanker traffic in BC’s coastal 
waters

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