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Hamilton

'Chasing phantoms': Hamilton council will stop looking for Chedoke Creek whistleblower

Hamilton city council will stop searching for a whistleblower who went public with a massive spill of toxic material into Chedoke Creek.

'We've been down this road before. It never amounts to anything'

A sign on a bridge.
Hamilton council has voted to not seek out and punish whoever leaked information about the Chedoke Creek discharge. (Patrick Morrell/CBC)

Hamilton city council will stop searching for a whistleblower who went public abouta massive spill of sewage and storm runoff into Chedoke Creek, saying it's akin to "chasing phantoms."

Councillors voted Wednesday to drop the whistleblower issue. They had previouslytalked about working with police to identify andpunish whoever slipped an anonymous tip about the 24 billion litre spill into the creek.

Mayor Fred Eisenberger said afterward that the searchwasn't likely to bear fruit anyway.

"I'm not interested in chasing phantoms," he said. "It's a fool's errand. We've been down this road before. It never amounts to anything, so why go through this exercise?

"Done is done and we need to move forward."

Council has faced intense criticism over its handling of the Chedoke Creek issue.

From 2014 to 2018, a bypass gateat a facility that houses Hamilton's largest combined sewage tank was left partially open.The city admitted to a leak last year, but the magnitude only became public when someone submitted an anonymoustip to the Hamilton Spectator. Before that, council discussed the issuein closed session.

Council discussed the whistleblowerissue in closed session Wednesday too. Coun. John-Paul Danko of Ward 8 (west Mountain) said while the Chedoke Creek informationleak was "of public benefit," he doesn't like that issues discussed in camera are leaked.

"It's a symptom of a larger problem," he said.