[IPSM] Suncor, contractors charged with dumping into Athabasca
Macdonald Stainsby
mstainsby at resist.ca
Wed Mar 11 22:00:38 PDT 2009
Suncor, contractors charged with dumping into Athabasca (article one of two)
JEFF CUMMINGS, METRO EDMONTON
March 11, 2009
Oilsands powerhouse Suncor and two of its contractors have been charged
under Alberta’s Environmental Protection and Enhancement Act with 90
counts of dumping poorly treated sewage water into the Athabasca River.
The companies, which were all charged back in February 2008, are also
accused of providing misleading and false information to the province
for two years at Suncor’s work camp north of Fort McMurray.
“This is serious, we are prosecuting at the moment, this is before the
courts,” said Premier Ed Stelmach in the Legislature Wednesday.
“We are monitoring it and this shows the system is working.”
The government accuses Suncor and its contractors, Compass Group of
Canada and R&D McCabe Ltd., that they “knowingly provided misleading or
false information” sometime August 2005 to January 2007.
“These are charges once again show that the government’s system of
letting industry report and police itself is incredibly flawed,” said
Mike Hudema with Greenpeace.
Suncor is expected to appear in a Fort McMurray provincial courtroom
April 2 on the charges and the province says the maximum penalty for the
charges is a $1 million fine.
http://www.metronews.ca/calgary/local/article/194833
Suncor facing charges after partially-treated sewage dumped into Alberta
river
THE CANADIAN PRESS
March 11, 2009
FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. - A major oilsands player in Alberta is facing
pollution charges that were laid more than a year ago and some are
wondering if Premier Ed Stelmach's Tory government kept the matter quiet
because of an election campaign.
Suncor Energy and two of its contractors were charged in February of
last year, shortly before the March 3 provincial election, with dumping
dirty wastewater from two northern work camps into the Athabasca River.
But the government made no announcement about the charges and the
closest downstream community appears to have been kept in the dark about
human wastes being dumped in the river.
"Did the government hide this information from Albertans because an
election was coming?" asked Liberal Leader David Swann. "Did they not
consider the public's right to know?"
Environment Minister Rob Renner said he was briefed a year ago about the
charges and simply assumed that a news release had been issued.
"I wasn't aware that it was a secret," Renner told reporters Wednesday.
"I certainly was aware of it."
The minister explained he felt the information became public once
charges were laid, even though provincial court records are not
published and are only released for a fee.
"I was under the impression that since it was before the courts,
everyone else had the same level of knowledge," he said.
But Renner also conceded that the crux of the case is the requirement
that communities be alerted if some kind of pollution threatens people's
health.
"There is an obligation on the part of an operator to let downstream
folks know," said the minister.
Stelmach was forced to respond to the issue in the legislature Wednesday
and conceded that sewage had been dumped into the river for several
years before the problem was uncovered.
"What went into the river was crap," the premier said bluntly. "These
are sewage lagoons."
Stelmach told the assembly that anyone who abuses environmental laws in
Alberta will be charged "and brought to justice."
Suncor spokesman Brad Bellows said steps were taken to inform downstream
communities.
But he also said the sewage likely had very little impact on water
quality in the river because the Athabasca is a very high volume river
and the amount of sewage that entered the water was "relatively small."
"We took action when we became aware of a possible problem in early 2007
and at that time the wastewater facility manager was dismissed," Bellows
said.
The two work camps had a total of about 3,500 residents and are adjacent
to each other near Suncor's main oilsands operation north of Fort McMurray.
"This is breaking news to us," said Jeff Winsor, deputy administrator
for the aboriginal community of Fort McKay. "It's somewhat of a shocker
that it would be a full year before charges were revealed."
Jeff Winsor, deputy administrator for the 600-member aboriginal
community of Fort McKay, called it "a shocker."
His people take their water from another river and don't usually eat
fish from the Athabasca. But Fort Chipewyan, roughly 500 kilometres
downstream from the work camps, gets its water from a lake that's fed by
the Athabasca River.
Melody Lepine, with the Mikisew Cree band in Fort Chipewyan, said Suncor
downplayed the sewage discharge when it first informed the band roughly
a year ago.
"We just had to take what the company at face value because that's the
only information we had," said Lepine.
Band officials were angry and demanded that Suncor hold a public
meeting, which happened about six months later, she said.
But Lepine said the band should have been alerted by the province's
Environment Department and she suspects that March 3 election likely
caused the government to shy away from issuing a news release.
"This would have been a huge embarrassment for them during an election,"
she said.
The contractors charged are the Compass Group Canada, which ran the
camps, and Rodney McCabe, whose now-defunct company operated the two
wastewater plants.
Environment Minister Rob Renner said the charges were laid after a
routine audit found problems with the sewage discharge.
The case is scheduled to begin April 2 in provincial court in Fort
McMurray. McCabe, when reached at his home in Kamloops, B.C., refused
comment and his lawyer in Calgary did not return calls.
Compass spokeswoman Brenda Brown said the company co-operated during the
investigation.
"And we're prepared to take responsibility for any actions that properly
rest with us and we will do so on April 2, which is the sentencing
hearing," Brown said.
- By Jim Macdonald in Edmonton
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