Kahnaw:ke traditional government says Chteauguay, Que.,lacked transparency after oil spill - Action News
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Kahnaw:ke traditional government says Chteauguay, Que.,lacked transparency after oil spill

TheKanien'keh:ka Nation atKahnaw:ke, thetraditional seat of government for the community south of Montreal, is calling for compensation from the provincial and federal governments after an oil spill traced to Chteauguayseeped onto its territory.

Kahnaw:ke residents reported fumes and oil slick in creeks days after oil tanker issue in neighbouring city

A Kanien'keh:ka woman in a coat reads a letter to a white man wearing a grey jacket with a crowd and TV journalists.
Kanien'keh:ka Nation at Kahnaw:ke member Karihwakatste Deer reads a letter to Chteauguay Mayor ric Allard, saying his municipality 'deliberately attempted to hide evidence' of an oil spill that seeped into her community. (Paula Dayan Perez/CBC)

TheKanien'keh:ka Nation atKahnaw:ke, thetraditional seat of government for the community south of Montreal, is calling for compensation from the provincial and federal governments after an oil spill traced to the neighbouring city of Chteauguayseeped onto its territory.

The nation saysKahnaw:ke community members only became aware of the presence of fuel seepage more than a week afteran industrial spill took place in early February.

Several dozenKahnaw:ke residents and members of the nation, also known as the Longhouse, presented themselves atChteauguay's city hall Friday morning to meet Mayor ric Allard.

Standing outside, nation memberKarihwakatste Deerread a letterto Allard, saying his municipality "deliberately attempted to hide evidence of the spill" because he failed to inform the community ofKahnaw:ke about it and because there were signs of acleanup near the city's boundary with Kahnaw:ke.

"We consider this an act of aggression against the Kanien'keh:ka of Kahnaw:ke," Deer read. "If this happened anywhere else in Quebec, the municipality would have the burden of responsibility to remediate the land and water."

The nation has linked the oil seepage found inKahnaw:ke to an event involving an oil tanker truck that occurred on Feb. 1 onIndustrielBoulevardinChteauguay.

The event took place near the headwaters of the Suzanne River in which the Kanien'keh:ka (Mohawk) Council of Kahnaw:ke (MCK), the community's band council, reported on Feb. 22 that it had found traces of Class #2 Diesel and heating oil.

sandbags in a frozen ditch
Sandbags used to prevent oil from travelling in a waterway were laid near a petroleum transportation company on Industriel Boulevard in Chteauguay, near Kahnaw:ke. (Paula Dayan Perez/CBC)

Allard insisted to the crowd it was unclear to him that the source of the oil found on Kahnaw:ke's territory had originated from the Feb. 1 event, which he described as "a simple mechanic problem with a truck that needed to be towed."

Allard said the fire department had responded to the issue and found only oil that had apparently leaked from the truck's fuel tank but not from its oil tanker, which he said was empty at the time.

"They did a cleanup, they had some discussions with the owner of the truck and that was it. So, there was no spilling. They checked around the ditch there. They checked the land. So, we don't know what happened," he said. "It's a concern for us, for your population, for our population. It's a concern for the environment as well."

But in a written statement Friday evening, the Quebec Environment Ministry appeared to confirm an oil spill did in fact take place. The ministrysaid it was informed on Feb. 12 by Environment and Climate Change Canada of a petroleum spill that had taken place in Chteauguay on Feb. 1.

"The spill apparently occurred on Feb. 1 from a tanker truck belonging to the company La Ptrolire N&R Sol inc. The municipal fire department was notified and intervened, but Urgence-Environnement was not informed of the situation at that time."

a man in a hoodie and a warrior hat stands outside an old stone building
Joseph Deom, a spokesperson for the Kanien'keh:ka Nation at Kahnaw:ke, said the traditional government is asking for physical and financial assistance in cleaning the presence of oil from its territory following an oil spill in neighbouring Chteauguay. (Paula Dayan Perez/CBC)

Urgence-Environnementis the provincial agency that intervenes in cases of environmental emergencies, typically in collaboration with municipalities, according to its website.

After Deer read the letter to Allard, Longhouse spokesperson Joseph Deomtold reportershe was thankful the mayor had been cordial and stepped outside to meet with them.

"We're of the opinion that the spill was a little bit more, let's say, critical than what he purports it to be," Deom said.

Deom said the nation wantsphysical and financial assistance in cleaning the oil from the community's waterways and its ground waters.

a group of people wakling along a driveway . some women wearing ribbon skirts.
Residents of Kahnaw:ke and members of the Kanien'keh:ka Nation at Kahnaw:ke leave the longhouse before heading to meet Chteauguay Mayor ric Allard. (Paula Dayan Perez/CBC)

Quebec Premier Franois Legaultmet with Allard, as well asMCK grand chief Kahsennenhawe Sky-Deer, on Friday.

"I want to make surethat the Environment Ministry and [Minister Benoit]Charette will first investigate exactly this situation and that we participate to the financing of the corrections that are needed," Legault told reporters afterward.

Representatives for Chief Sky-Deer did not immediately return CBC's request for comment.

Mary Lee Armstrong,her mother and two teenage daughters have temporarily moved out of their home on Zachary Roadnear the Suzanne River inKahnaw:kebecause of the presence of hydrocarbon fumes detectedin the house.

a woman wearing a turquoise sweater and purple jacket stands in a frontyard
Mary Lee Armstrong and her family have temporarily moved out of their home near the Suzanne River in Kahnaw:ke due to the presence of hydrocarbons fumes. (Paula Dayan Perez/CBC)

Armstrong and her daughters spent a week staying in hotels before her insurer rented them a place to stay in Beaconsfield in Montreal's West Island.

The process has been disorienting for the family, Armstrong said.

"Our community is here. We're all connected and it feels like that's been taken. I feel really mad. I feel really upset that so much could have been prevented," she said.

"Even if an accident happens, what you need to do is the right thing."

With files from Paula Dayan Perez