Montreal's St. Lawrence River sewage dump slammed by U.S. state senator
'I am very concerned by the precedent Montreal is setting for other communities': Patty Ritchie of New York
A U.S.lawmaker is calling for aninvestigation into the City of Montreal's decision to dump eight billion litres of raw sewage into the St. Lawrence River.
New York state senator Patty Ritchie wants the International Joint Commission the group tasked with protecting the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes to look into the plan.
- St. Lawrence River sewage dump needs OK from Environment Canada to go ahead
- Montreal to dump 8 billion litres of sewage in the St.Lawrence
- St. Lawrence raw sewage dump on hold after public outcry
- Millions of litres of sewagespilled into Montreal rivers
"The City of Montreal plans to dump the equivalent of 2,600 Olympic-sized swimming pools filled with wastewater from homes and businesses into North America's most beautiful river,"Ritchiewrote in the letter, sent to the commission Friday and published on herwebsite.
"While I realize that the dumping will occur in Canadian waters, downstream from any U.S. communities, I am very concerned by the precedent Montreal is setting for other communities along the St. Lawrence and the lakes."
The city estimates it would cost $1 billion to build a temporary diversion or storage area for wastewater.
The work is being done as part ofwork on the Bonaventure Expressway.
Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre had temporarily put the brakes on the plan after widespread public criticism, but ultimately decided to go ahead.
The sewage will be allowed to flow into the river beginning Oct. 18, and that will continue for about a week.
City spokesman PhilippeSabourinsaid last week that contamination is not a big concern because of the sheer size of the river and how quickly it flows.
Quebec's Environment Ministry has approved the decision butEnvironmentCanada has said the plan is prohibited under the Fisheries Act.
Montreal not alone
Until the1980s,it was common practice to clear Montreal's sewers this way, but it is no longer considered an acceptablepractice.
Montreal isn'tthe first Canadian city to release untreated sewage into oceans, lakes and rivers.
For years, untreated sewageflowed freely into Halifax Harbour.
Victoria stilldischarges millions of litres of rawsewage into the Strait of Juan de Fuca every day, while Winnipeg'soutdated sewer system hasledto185 million litresof raw sewage being dumped into the city's waterways.