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Hamilton pauses dredging work in Chedoke Creek to consult with Haudenosaunee group

Hamilton is pausing its dredging work in Chedoke Creek to consult with the Haudenosaunee Development Institute about how the work may impact treaty rights and the environment.

Haudenosaunee Development Institute had people visit the dredging site to watch for environmental concerns

A boat and a tube sit in a water way
The dredging work at Chedoke Creek has been paused. The dredging is an attempt to clean up the creek after 24 billion litres of sewage and stormwater entered the waters between 2014 and 2018. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

Hamilton is pausing its dredging work in Chedoke Creek to consult with the Haudenosaunee Development Institute (HDI) about how the work may impact treaty rights and the environment.

HDI recently said it askedthe city for meaningful consultation about the clean-up efforts but the work went ahead anyway. The clean-up had been ordered by the province after a spill of24 billion litres of sewage and stormwaterinto the creek.

"City staff are continuing to meet and discuss options with all key stakeholders to determine best way forward that enables the City to meet the [province's]requirements under the order," read a release from the city Wednesday.

HDI lawyer Aaron Detlor saysthat the group is representing the Haudenosaunee Confederacy Chiefs Council, the traditional leaders of the Haudenosaunee people.

As their treaty landscover a large portion of Ontario, including Hamilton,Aaron Detlor says the city ought to consult HDI.

The spill was the result ofa valve on the city's combined sewer overflowsystem left open between 2014 and 2018, causinga layer of biohazardous sediment to settle at the bottom of the creek.

The Ministry of Environment, Conservation, and Parks ordered the clean up and thecity hired Milestone Environmental Contracting Inc. to complete the work for just under $6 million.

The city said the work that is now paused was in preparation for thetargeted dredge work that was set to startin late August.

A man stands on a bridge above water
Aaron Detlor said the City of Hamilton needs to consult Haudenosaunee leaders about how to care for Chedoke Creek. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

HDI representatives visited the dredging site at Kay Drage Park offMacklin Street Northlast week to watch for environmental concerns. The city said HDI representatives also visited on Monday, saying they were exercising treaty rights. It then said it would send its own environmental monitors throughout the process, due to the lack of consultation.

The city said previously it has been in consultationwith local First Nations communities about the work, but it's unclear which Indigenous communities were consulted.

"City staff have also been working with HDIregarding their request for an Environmental Monitoring Agreement with the HDI for the project, and those efforts are ongoing," the citystatement said.

It's unclear when the work will resume.

Detlorpreviouslytold CBC he has no plans to block the dredging but needs the city"to help us understand what's going on here so we can explain it to people who have questions."