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Montreal

St. Lawrence sewage dump: City releases test results

Other than a big spike on a rainy day, the concentration of bacteria throughout the raw sewage dump into the St. Lawrence River was as expected. Check out our chart of the data for details.

Fecal bacteria far above average concentrations, resemble numbers seen during heavy rains

Sewage being dumped into a body of water.
Montreal dumped raw sewage into the St. Lawrence River as repairs were made to a major sewer interceptor. (iStock)

Other than a big spike on a rainy day, the concentration of bacteria throughout the raw sewage dump into the St. Lawrence River was as expected.

The City of Montreal released the results of the water quality tests performed throughoutthe four-day sewage dump.

While fecal bacterial levels were far above average concentrations, they resembled numbers seen during heavy rains, when sewers overflow into the river, a water quality expert in Montreal said.

"I'm not surprised by the numbers," said Sarah Dorner, an associate professor at the Polytechnique Montral's Department of Civil, Geological and Mining Engineering.

See how the bacterial levels changed throughout the dump for 10 selected sampling stationsin the chart below.

The big spike on Nov. 12 was registered by a station close to oneof the pipes that spewed the raw sewage, near LaSalle Boulevard and Stephens Street in Verdun.

It likely detected some of the waste before it had a chance to dilute.

The reading that day was 2.7 million coliform units per 100 mL of river water. Raw sewage hasaround 4 million.

"It is clearly a site that is directly hydraulically connected to the overflow point,"Dornersaid.

The average concentration in the St. Lawrence around Montreal since 2008 is 193 coliformunitsper 100 mL, safe enough for human contact.

The spike was also likely caused by the heavy rains that day. When the sewer system is overloaded by rain, it dumps excess sewage into the river.

"You could get a re-suspension of sewer deposits that get flushed out and increase concentrations," Dorner said.