Anti-sewage dump petition handed over to Denis Coderre - Action News
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Montreal

Anti-sewage dump petition handed over to Denis Coderre

Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre accepted a copy of a petition with 90,000 signatures on it, demanding that the city scrap its plan to dump eight billion litres of wastewater into the St. Lawrence River.

Montreal Mayor salutes 90,000 people who signed petition against plan to dump wastewater directly into river

Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre said he admires the citizens who signed a petition against the city's plan to dump sewage into the river, but the plan is "the only option." (Radio-Canada)

Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre accepted a copy of a petition with 90,000 signatures on it, demanding that the city flushits plan to dump eight billion litres of wastewater into the St. Lawrence River.

Coderre shook hands with citizen Xavier Nonnenmacher, who presented the petition this evening during Ville-Marie's borough council meeting in downtown Montreal.

Several times during the meeting, Coderre acknowledged Nonnenmacher's initiative.

Xavier Nonnenmacher started the petition, demanding the city scrap its plan to dump 8 billion litres of sewage into the river. (CBC)
"I salute the citizens who, you know, they don't like [the plan] and they signed a petition," Coderre said when talking to reporters outside the council chamber.

Coderre took several questions from Nonnenmacher and insisted that the plan is a "necessary evil."

"Are we pleased with it? No, we're not," Coderre said, adding that city officials consulted with several experts and were advised this was the only option.

"What we are putting together, that's the only option that we have. You have the experts and the scientific academics experts who are saying 'You have no choice. That's the only option.'"

The controversy comes after the City of Montreal announced last month that it plans to dump eight billion litres of sewage straight into the Saint Lawrence River from Oct. 18 to Oct. 25.

A major sewer interceptor must be drained to allow necessary construction work to be completed near the Bonaventure Expressway, a raised highway that runs along the downtown shoreline which is being torn down.

Last week, Environment Canada stepped in, saying it wanted to analyze the file more closely.

Ministry officials met with the City last Friday.

Coderre said Environment Canada is expected to take a positionon the plan onWednesday.