B.C. Premier Christy Clark was a partner in a lobbying firm that was contracted by Enbridge and lobbied the federal government on the company's behalf, according to documents obtained by The Vancouver Observer. The documents originate from the years when Clark stepped away from politics.

The Premier's spokesperson, however, stated that Enbridge was no longer a client of the firm by the time she joined the firm.

In a 2006 Confidential Government Relations Plan from Burrard Communications, Clark is listed as a partner in the company. Burrard Communications is a lobbying firm founded by Clark’s ex-husband Mark Marissen.

Burrard Communications lobbied the federal government on behalf of Enbridge Inc. starting in April 2005. The Plan stated that “Burrard worked on issues related to their Gateway Project" including "strategic communications advice and federal government relations.”

The firm was located at Clark’s then-primary residence at 511 San Remo Drive in Port Moody, BC

– where Clark was the former provincial MLA for Port Moody/Burnaby Mountain. The registration was later switched to an address on Granville Street in Vancouver, BC.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Clark said, when presented with the documents from Burrard Communications listing her name. Clark faced questions about her past work with Burrard Communications while she was in Ottawa to promote B.C.’s Liquid Natural Resources on Monday.

"(Clark) never worked for Enbridge and by the time she briefly worked at Burrard, Enbridge was no longer a client," her press secretary Sam Oliphant said today.

Clark's ties to the lobbying firm for Enbridge appeared to have ended entirely when she became Premier, but she later raised eyebrows by appointing Ken Boessenkool, a former Enbridge lobbyist and advisor to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, as her chief of staff in 2012.

Her ex-husband's name was among those lobbying for Enbridge on behalf of Burrard Communications. The other Enbridge lobbyist at the firm, John Fraser, later became Clark's assistant deputy minister for strategic planning and public engagement. According to a media report in 2006, she was slated to join the firm as an equal partner.

Screenshot from Office of the Commissioner of Lobbying website.