North

Supreme Court to decide this week on Yukon Peel watershed appeal

Legal wrangling continues over Yukon's Peel watershed land use plan. The Supreme Court will announce whether it will hear an appeal from Yukon First Nations and environmental groups.

Court will announce whether it will hear appeal from First Nations and conservation groups

Yukon First Nations and environmental groups announced in December that they would apply to the Supreme Court of Canada to hear an appeal of the Peel watershed planning decision. (Cheryl Kawaja/CBC)

A major decision for Yukon is coming this week from the Supreme Court of Canada.

The court will announce Thursday whether or not it will hear an appeal by a group of Yukon First Nations and environmental groups. They want an earlier decision by the Yukon Court of Appeal on the Peel planning process overturned.

That ruling quashed the Yukon Government's Peel land use plan, sending the process back to an earlier stage for more consultation.

The Yukon government has been at odds with First Nations and environmental groups over how much of the region should be open to development. (CBC)

Conservations groups and First Nations believe the ruling was a mistake in law that ignored First Nation land claim agreements.

"While it did confirm Yukon Government failed to honour treaty obligations, the remedy in our opinion leaves the Peel watershed vulnerable to development and does not uphold the integrity of the final agreements," said Christina Macdonald, executive director for the Yukon Conservation Society. 

The territorial government has argued against the Supreme Court getting involved, saying there's no issue of national or public importance at stake. 

The government is at odds with First Nations and environmental groups over how much of the Peel River watershed should be protected from development.
 

With files from Vic Istchenko