Former NHLer Niedermayer backs anti-Jumbo 
resort group
 

Retired hockey star Scott Niedermayer joins Ktunaxa 
Nation chair Kathryn Teneese and NDP leader Adrian Dix at a news conference to 
urge rejection of the Jumbo Glacier Resort.  
Tom Fletcher/Black 
Press

By Tom Fletcher - BC Local News
Published: November 15, 2011 2:00 PM 
Updated: November 15, 
2011 3:24 PM 
http://www.bclocalnews.com/news/133922293.html
VICTORIA – Opponents of the long-proposed Jumbo Glacier Resort near Cranbrook 
went on the offensive in the B.C. legislature Tuesday, with retired hockey star 
Scott Niedermayer joining a local aboriginal group to press for its 
rejection.
Niedermayer joined Kathryn Teneese, chair of the Ktunaxa 
Nation council and NDP leader Adrian Dix to urge the B.C. government to reject 
the proposed resort, on Jumbo glacier in the Purcell Mountains.
The project has been studied for more than 20 years, and received a 
provincial environmental certificate in 2005. The last step is approval of a 
master development agreement, which Forests, Lands and Natural Resource 
Operations Minister Steve Thomson could make at any time.
Teneese showed a video with testimonials of aboriginal and other local 
residents, and released a study by Simon Fraser University economist Marvin 
Shaffer that questions the economic viability of adding another ski resort to 
the region.
The Ktunaxa call the region Qat'muk, and say it is a sacred 
place for them.
"It's where the grizzly bear spirit was born, goes to heal itself, and 
returns to the spirit world," Teneese told a news conference hosted by the NDP 
at the legislature Tuesday.
Columbia River-Revelstoke MLA Norm Macdonald and Nelson-Creston MLA Michelle 
Mungall oppose the resort, and say their communities support their position.
Kootenay East MLA Bill Bennett, the only B.C. Liberal in the region, has been 
an outspoken advocate for Jumbo resort. Bennett notes that the Shuswap First 
Nation, which claims to be the closest aboriginal community to the Jumbo 
glacier, supports the resort proposal and asserts its own detailed territorial 
claim.
Bennett also notes there is an existing helicopter-skiing operation on the 
Jumbo glacier, a road to the region built 50 years ago, and the year-round 
resort is proposed for an abandoned sawmill site.
In a December 2010 letter to the B.C. government, Shuswap chief Paul Sam 
described the Jumbo Basin as a dead end with no traditional food gathering or 
travel function.
"Throughout the long review of the Jumbo basin, all First Nations agreed that 
it carried little significance to our respective to our respective traditional 
uses," Sam wrote.
Niedermayer said that while he lives in California, he returns to the 
Cranbrook area with his family in the summer. Other local ski resorts in the 
area have undeveloped lots, so he questions the need for another one to be 
approved.
"There are some logging roads and things like that, but the bears are allowed 
to move the way they need to to have a healthy population," Niedermayer 
said.

Reply via email to