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A sign opposing coal development is shown in the eastern slopes of the Livingston range southwest of Longview, Alta., on June 16, 2021.Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press

An Alberta mayor says he’s concerned a massive public outcry over coal mining in the province’s Rocky Mountains will be ignored after hearing Premier Jason Kenney tell him he remains an “unapologetic supporter” of the industry.

“It’s very clear to me that Premier Kenney is 100 per cent behind the coal mining companies,” said Craig Snodgrass of High River after meeting with the Premier, Energy Minister Sonya Savage and his local member of the legislative assembly, Roger Reid, earlier this month.

The comments came to light this week after Mr. Snodgrass informed town council about the meeting, which took place at the mayor’s request. High River’s council has been vocally opposed to the industry’s expansion.

The meeting occurred about two weeks after the government received public consultation reports on the expansion of the industry. Mr. Snodgrass said he asked for the meeting with the province to see if the reports had shifted Mr. Kenney’s stand from that expressed in year-end interviews.

“I wanted to see, ‘Are you serious about your comments?’ He absolutely gave me his 100-per-cent honest opinion on it, whether I like it or not.”

Although the reports have not been made public, submissions posted to the committee’s website suggest many, if not most, Albertans are opposed to seeing widespread open-pit coal mining on some of the province’s most beloved landscapes and the headwaters of most of its drinking water.

Mr. Kenney is not, Mr. Snodgrass said.

“He made it very clear that he is an unapologetic supporter of the industry,” Mr. Snodgrass said, adding that the Premier referred dismissively to the work of the coal consultation committee, which collected 605 e-mailed submissions, held 59 meetings across the province and published 16 technical papers and 36 meeting submissions.

“The only thing he said is that it is information that forms part of the decision.”

In an e-mailed statement, a spokesman for Mr. Kenney , Justin Brattinga, said the reports will be forthcoming. “The Alberta government is taking time to review the coal policy committee’s reports and is planning to release the reports once a thorough review of the findings has been completed,” he said.

“We will also provide our response to the committee’s recommendations when the reports are released.”

Coal development has been controversial in Alberta since spring of 2020, when the United Conservative government suddenly revoked a policy that had protected the summits and foothills of the Rockies from open-pit coal mines since 1976. Within weeks, thousands of hectares were leased for coal exploration.

New Democrat opposition politicians said Mr. Kenney’s remarks showed the government isn’t listening to Albertans.

“One cannot claim to be listening and say their mind is made up,” said Shannon Phillips of Lethbridge, a city which would be downstream of many of the potential mines.

Environment critic Marlin Schmidt called on the government to release the reports.

“We want to know exactly what the coal committee heard from Albertans and what it’s recommending to government,” he said. “The thousands of Albertans who have participated in the consultations will be able to tell whether the coal policy committee accurately captured what they heard.”

Mr. Snodgrass said his impression was that not everyone at the meeting shared Mr. Kenney’s certitude.

“I do know members of the UCP, Sonya [Savage] and cabinet ministers, most of them are taking [the reports] seriously,” he said.

But Mr. Schmidt said it’s the Premier who matters most. “A split in cabinet doesn’t matter. If there’s disagreement, the Premier will win.”

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