Mineral exploration company charged over work near Whitehorse - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:49 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Mineral exploration company charged over work near Whitehorse

B.C.-based Gladiator Metals Corp. is facing charges related to a contentiousexploration project near Cowley Creek, just outside of Whitehorse.

B.C.-based Gladiator Metals faces 6 charges under Quartz Mining Act

Displaced rock, tree limbs, and dirt along a trail.
Some of the effects of drilling along trails near Cowley Creek this past spring. Gladiator Metals now faces six charges under Yukon's mining laws, related to the early-stage exploration project. (Leslie Amminson/CBC)

A B.C.-based mineral explorationcompany is facing charges related to a contentiousproject near Cowley Creek, just outside of Whitehorse.

Gladiator Metals Corp. is facing six charges under Yukon's Quartz Mining Act. The company is alleged to have exceeded the scopeof its exploration permit, by clearing vegetation and upgrading access roads, among other things.

The chargesrelate to work done between April 24 and May 12 this year.

The company has been drilling in the area near Cowley Creek to measure copper levels, under a permit for early-stage exploration.

The project raised concerns this past spring among local residents who complained about the "horrific mess" the company was making.

The drill sites are accessible off the South Klondike Highway, just a few minutes outside Whitehorseand beside Cowley Creek. Drill trails were established there as part of mining operations in the 1970s and '80s, but residents of neighbouring subdivisions say they now use those trails for recreation. And, they say, the work has torn up the area.

Court documents filed in late June allege that some of Gladiator's actions havebeen done without an approved operating plan. Those allegedactions include:

  • Creating clearings greaterthan 400 square metres.
  • Upgrading access roads.
  • Explorationwithout approval by the Heritage Resources Unit.
  • Removing the vegetative matwithout storing it for reestablishing it later.
  • Failing to contain drill fluids in a sump.
  • Rutting and gouging roads and trails.

Most of the charges carry a maximum penalty of $20,000under Yukon mining laws.

In an emailed statement to CBC News, Gladiator spokesperson Jason Bontemposaid the company's lawyers are in contact with the Yukon government about the charges.

"Aswe have been successfully working with [the Compliance, Monitoring and Inspections branch]onupdatedplans and procedures for future exploration,it is our intention to continue with the approved program in compliance with all relevant regulations," Bontempowrote.

The Yukon government declined to comment on the charges while they're before the courts.

Gladiator will next appear in Yukon Territorial Court on August 15.

With files from Leslie Amminson