Sheila Sanderson they knew what the outcome would be. “They knew, but they were after the high water for Hydro purposes. That was the main goal no matter what. They used to come here and say that our lives would be alotbetter with hydro power. I think we would’ve been a lot better off if we would've been left alone. We could’ve done without hydro power, that's for sure” (CBC files Country Canada). Conclusion Through the close examination of one hydroelectric diversion project, ithasbeen shown that while short term economic and political gains may be attractive, long term results can be very costly. This is especially true for the northern villages which are directly and pro- foundly affected by such projects. In Canada, very few hydrological projects were preceded by impact assessments even though ecological disaster has usually been recognized as unavoidable. Itis amazing that the damming and diverting of rivers continues when ecological risks are high. But governments have managed to ou tweigh such issues by appealing to the “public interest” (Waldram 1988:172). Garrett Hardin, in his Tragedy of the Commons essay, has pointed out that the promotion of public interest is quite impossible because it assumes that decisions reached individually, by a political leader for example, will, in fact, be the best decisions for an entire society. In the case of South Indian Lake, Manitoba’s premier decided that the Churchill-Nelson Hydro Project would benefit most, if not all, people of the province. As was made clear throughout this paper, this was far from true. What has been true is that “There is a political imperative and...an imperative which drives huge crown corporations. If those two imperatives meet and there is a community of interest, they will find a way of achieving what tends to be a shared objective” (CBCfiles for Country Canada). In the past, this has usually been done with total disregard for the ecosystems which are found within the community of shared interest. For the sake of the future, we must stop treating the northern resources of water, minerals, forests, etc. like packages which are sitting up on some shelf waiting to be brought down tobe ‘developed.” Anunderstandingof thoseresourcesand how they work together must be found sothatevenafter they are utilized, they can continue working together in a balanced manner. As Robert Newberry has argued 57