Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre Gives Ottawa One Week To Settle Sewage Dump

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2015 12:55 PM
    Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre has given federal environment officials one week to help break the stalemate over the dumping of eight billion litres of raw sewage into the St. Lawrence River.
     
    In a letter sent to Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq today, Coderre is challenging the interpretation of federal laws the government invoked to suspend the sewage dump that was set to begin this weekend.
     
    Coderre describes the actions taken by Ottawa as abusive and inappropriate and called on Ottawa to give the go-ahead by next Friday.
     
    He has previously said the work must be done between mid-October and mid-November and that delays could create serious problems.
     
    The city wants to close an interceptor _ a large sewer used to feed wastewater to treatment plants _ to do maintenance work and relocate a snow chute located underneath the Bonaventure Expressway, which the city is converting into an urban boulevard.
     
    This week, the federal government put the project on hold pending further, independent scientific analysis, saying it could not conclude from the information it had whether untreated wastewater to be released would be acutely toxic.
     
    The mayor said in the letter that many other Canadian municipalities dump untreated sewage without any Environment Canada intervention.
     
    Despite Monday's federal election, Coderre believes the work being done by bureaucrats can be completed in a timely manner.
     
    Documents show the federal Environment Department has been aware of the project since September 2014.
     
    Coderre says the delay is neither in the interest of neither the public nor the environment and called the minister's intervention "unreasonable."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Bharat Mata Ki Jai': When Jason Kenney Led India's Independence Day Celebrations In Toronto

    'Bharat Mata Ki Jai': When Jason Kenney Led India's Independence Day Celebrations In Toronto
    Canadian Defence Minister Jason Kenney led the India Independence Day celebrations here by chanting `Bharat Mata ki jai’ and `Hindustan zindabad’.

    'Bharat Mata Ki Jai': When Jason Kenney Led India's Independence Day Celebrations In Toronto

    UBC Chairman John Montalbano Says He Didn't Threaten To Pull Professor's Funding

    UBC Chairman John Montalbano Says He Didn't Threaten To Pull Professor's Funding
    Prof. Jennifer Berdahl has accused Montalbano of trying to muzzle her

    UBC Chairman John Montalbano Says He Didn't Threaten To Pull Professor's Funding

    Slow But Steady Progress Corraling The Rock Creek Wildfire Near Osoyoos

    Slow But Steady Progress Corraling The Rock Creek Wildfire Near Osoyoos
    The B.C. Wildfire Service says guards have been built around 25 per cent of the Rock Creek blaze.

    Slow But Steady Progress Corraling The Rock Creek Wildfire Near Osoyoos

    B.C. Forests Minister Steve Thomson Looking For Video To Help Solve Wildfire's Cause

    B.C. Forests Minister Steve Thomson Looking For Video To Help Solve Wildfire's Cause
     Steve Thomson says officials are looking for a video that apparently shows how a massive wildfire that has destroyed 30 homes in the province's southeast was sparked by a flicked cigarette.

    B.C. Forests Minister Steve Thomson Looking For Video To Help Solve Wildfire's Cause

    Federal Government In Court To Force Five First Nations To Disclose Finances

    Federal Government In Court To Force Five First Nations To Disclose Finances
    SASKATOON — Lawyers for the federal government are to be in court today to persuade a judge to force five First Nations to open their books to the public.

    Federal Government In Court To Force Five First Nations To Disclose Finances

    B.C. First Nations Lawyer Says Crown Didn't Consult On Specific Site C Permits

    B.C. First Nations Lawyer Says Crown Didn't Consult On Specific Site C Permits
    VANCOUVER — Two northeastern British Columbia First Nations will suffer "irreparable harm" if thousands of hectares of old-growth forest are cleared to build the Site C dam, their lawyer says.

    B.C. First Nations Lawyer Says Crown Didn't Consult On Specific Site C Permits