Posted: Jun 02, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: June 2 Ducie Howe, left, and a fellow Mi'kmaw activist, with a sign of protest against the proposed workcamp in Goldboro, N.S., for Pieridae Energy's liquified natural gas project.(Joey Brooks/Contributed) Some Mi'kmaq say the plan to build a liquified natural gas plant in rural Nova Scotia — which would require a 5,000-person workcamp — poses an unacceptable risk to women's safety and should be stopped. Ducie Howe is among them. The Mi'kmaw activist and water protector from Sipekne'katik First Nation said she does not support the proposed $13-billion Goldboro LNG plant on Nova Scotia's eastern shore, and she wants Mi'kmaw chiefs to withdraw from a deal to service the workcamp.