St. Lawrence not only Canadian waterway sullied by raw sewage - Action News
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Montreal

St. Lawrence not only Canadian waterway sullied by raw sewage

Montreal may be embroiled in controversy over its decision to dump eight billion litres of wastewater into the St. Lawrence River, but the same thing is happening in cities from coast to coast.

Cities from coast to coast continue to dump untreated wastewater into oceans, lakes, rivers

The City of Montreal's plan to dump eight billion litres of untreated wastewater into the St. Lawrence River has stirred controversy. (Thomas Daigle/CBC)

Montreal may be embroiled in controversy over its decision to dump eight billion litres of wastewater into the St. Lawrence River, but the same thing is happening in cities across Canada.

colePolytechnique engineering professor Sarah Dorner saidwhile she's happy people are talking about the city's decision, the bigger issue is that it's a frequent occurrence.

This is a very common problem.- Sarah Dorner,colePolytechniqueengineering professor

"This is a very common problem. It happens all through the Great Lakes, all through Quebec. There is raw sewage that ends up discharged into the rivers," told CBC Montreal's Radio Noon.

"We haven't been doing a good job communicating what the reality is on a day-to-day basis because this is a problem that occurs regularly across Canada."

Dornersaidthe issue needs to be solved, paying particular attention to the public health and environmental problems that sewage dumps cause.

Here's a rundown of other Canadian cities where dumps of raw sewage have taken place:

Halifax

Raw sewage was continuously pumped into the Halifax harbour untila newwastewater treatment plant was constructed in 2008. However, sewage continued to be discharged into the harbor unknowingly, when sewer lines were cut during construction.

Winnipeg

Roughly185-million litres of raw sewage havebeen dumped into Winnipeg's rivers since 2004 due to the city'santiquated combined-sewer system.The city says that massive upgrades need to bemade to the older sewer system, which could cost the cityup to $4billion.

Mr. Floatie is one citizen's attempt to protest the amount of raw sewage that continues to flow into Juan de Fuca Strait each day. (Mr. Floatie/Facebook)

Victoria and Esquimalt

The region pumps about 130-million litres of raw sewage daily into the Juan de Fuca Strait, a channel leadingto the Pacific Ocean. Victoria andEsquimalthavebeen in a longtime battle with the federal and provincial government concerning theirsewage treatment practices and havebeen struggling to find a site for a new treatment plant for years.

Esquimaltcitizen James Skwarokeven created a mascot to protest the sewage dump: Mr. Floatie, the giant turd.

Toronto

In July 2013, Toronto was pounded with 126 millimetres of rain in under two hours. More than a billion litres of sewage and storm wateroverflowed onto city streets and cascaded into Toronto's harbour.

Heavy rains often overwhelm Toronto's old sewer system, forcing thecity to bypass water-treatment plants and send raw sewage into LakeOntario.

With files with The Canadian Press