At least 50 people, including representatives of Vancouver neighborhood associations, arrived at the Port of Vancouver on Tuesday to press commissioners to reconsider the port’s lease for an oil-by-rail terminal and to provide the public with an uncensored copy of the contract.
Many of the opponents of the oil transfer terminal proposed by Tesoro Corp. and Savage Companies gathered on a grassy berm outside the port’s office minutes before the commission’s regular morning public hearing.
Some held signs showing the neighborhood associations to which they belong. “Terminal means fatal — coincidence?” read another sign. A big banner exclaimed: “No oil terminal.”
Inside the port’s hearing room, the overflow crowd spilled out into the lobby, where chairs were added. During the open forum portion of the commission’s hearing, an estimated 28 people spoke to Commissioners Nancy Baker, Jerry Oliver and Brian Wolfe. Twenty-six of them blistered the Tesoro-Savage proposal. The head of the region’s economic development agency, based in Vancouver, said the agency remains, to date, neutral toward the oil terminal but continues to analyze it. A representative of the Tesoro-Savage joint venture touted jobs and energy security, and said any negative impacts could be mitigated.