District investigating damage caused by 130-cubic metre sewage spill in Victoria area - Action News
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British Columbia

District investigating damage caused by 130-cubic metre sewage spill in Victoria area

A ruptured pipe at a Victoria-area landfill causedsome sewage to leakinto a nearby regional park,but the majority of the spill was contained, a districtofficial says; however, the exact environmental impact remains to be seen.

Official says temporary pipe burst at new treatment facility at district landfill

The Capital Regional District says a temporary pipe failed at the nearly completed residual treatment facility seen here. It's part of a nearly $800-million sewage treatment upgrade for Greater Victoria. (Capital Regional District)

A ruptured pipe at a Victoria-area landfill causedsome sewage to leakinto a nearby regional park,but the majority of the spill was contained, a districtofficial says.

However, the exact environmental impact remains to be seen, according toElizabeth Scott,deputy project director for the Capital Regional District (CRD) wastewater project.

Scott told CBCon Friday that the district was dealing with 130 cubic metres of sewage thatleakedat the Hartland Landfill and into Mount Work Regional Park on Oct. 13.

The spill occurred when apipe running from a new sewagetreatment facility that's currently under construction ruptured, Scott said. She said district staff will now be monitoring the landfill and park for signs of environmental damage.

"We are confident this will not happen again but we are completing a full incident investigation," said Scott on CBC'sAll Points West.

Deputy project director Elizabeth Scott says the most challenging part of the wastewater treatment project is that it requires laying as much as 30 kilometres of pipe, which will run through urban areas. (Briar Stewart/ CBC News )

The new facility, known as theResiduals Treatment Facility, is part of the CRD'sWastewater Treatment Projectand is currently in its testing phase. It's part of anearly $800-millionsewage treatment upgrade for Greater Victoria.

Scott said the faulty pipe responsible for the spill is a temporary one and that the permanent pipe will havesafety valves and automatic monitoring that will prevent future incidents.

The spill site is located close toDurrance Lake, which Scott said was not contaminated. She said the majority of the sewage was contained at the landfill, while some got into the park through a culvert.

"No sewage has made it into [the]lake and we are confident that none will," she said.

Scott said staff will continuously test ground samples during cleanup to monitor for possible long-term environmental damage.

The pump station at the the Hartland Landfill for Greater Victoria's new wastewater system, which is expected to be complete by the end of 2020. (Capital Regional District)

Signs have been put up in Mount Work Regional Park advising visitors to avoidthe area where the spill occurred, but accordingto the CRD, the incident did notpose a risk to public health.

The construction of Victoria's first wastewater treatment facility began in 2017 and has been heralded as long overdue by some and dismissed as unnecessary by others.

The region isthe last major coastal community in North America still disposingof untreated sewage by pumping it into the marine environment, according to thelocal government.

Federal regulations introduced in 2012mean the CRD which is comprised of three electoral areas and 13 municipalities includingVictoria, Saanichand Esquimalt must have a treatment plant up and running by the end of 2020.

Scott says the CRD is on track to make that deadline.

With files from All Points West, Briar Stewart