Michelle Corfield, Jennifer Turner, Harrie Vredenburg and Liana Wolf Leg
Dr. Michelle Corfield is a Nuu-Chah-Nulth woman from Vancouver Island’s Ucluelet First Nation. She consults to First Nations and is former chair of the Nanaimo Port Authority. She is the marine and environmental advisor for Project Reconciliation, a coalition of Indigenous communities that has submitted a bid for Trans Mountain. Jennifer Turner, a geoscientist by profession, was the first woman to work on many rigs in the Western Canadian oil industry. After nearly a decade of drilling experience she became communications director of Iron and Earth, a renewable energy not-for-profit, before joining Project Reconciliation as communications director in Victoria, B.C. Dr. Harrie Vredenburg is a professor and Suncor chair in strategy and sustainability at the University of Calgary’s Haskayne School of Business and a research fellow at the University’s School of Public Policy. He is also an international research fellow at Oxford University. He is an executive board member at Project Reconciliation. Liana Wolf Leg is a Blackfoot woman from the Siksika Nation on the Western Great Plains. She is a student at the University of Calgary. She is Project Reconciliation’s Indigenous youth relations lead.