Most of what people believe about Churchill Falls is just sheer nonsense. Made up. Never true. Completely ludicrous. But accepted as fact and unshakeable truth all the same. And that's where things get weird. People use all that foolishness nonsense to make decisions in the real world.
One of the enduring legends is that Newfoundland wanted a corridor to wheel electricity through Quebec, went to the federal government in the 1960s to look for one, couldn't get it, and thus wound up a slave to Hydro-Quebec in 1969. It's been a popular story since the 1970s, after the Newfoundland government nationalised BRINCO.
There's never been any evidence that Joe Smallwood ever put the question to Lester Pearson although lots of people will swear to it and swear by the story as evidence of how Newfoundland has been shagged by whatever version of the foreign boogie-man they favour.
Danny Williams trotted the story out, indirectly, in November 2010 when he announced he had committed the provincial government to build Muskrat Falls. Our electricity would never be stranded again. We would never again be held hostage by Quebec. The new, magnificent power corridor through Nova Scotia was the way that we would break Quebec's stranglehold over our magnificent future.
Yay! Hooray! people screamed, including more than a few editors and columnists.
The only thing was that what Williams said wasn't true.
And he knew it.
Yay! Hooray! people screamed, including more than a few editors and columnists.
The only thing was that what Williams said wasn't true.
And he knew it.