Toxic substances from N.L. mine endanger town: study - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 16, 2024, 07:40 PM | Calgary | 4.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Toxic substances from N.L. mine endanger town: study

Every resident in the small community of Buchans, in central Newfoundland, has been told they should get a blood test to find out if they've been poisoned by lead.

'Reason to be concerned,' health minister says

The old Buchans mine has been closed for nearly three decades. ((CBC))

Every resident in the small central Newfoundland community of Buchans has been told they should get a blood test to find out if they've been poisoned by lead.

Three cabinet ministers from the provincial government travelled to the community Tuesday to deliver the news to residentsduring a hastily called meeting at the local town hall.

Results from tests done during the summer show that an abandoned mine site that stretches over eight square kilometres around the perimeter of the community has dangerously high levels of lead and other metals.

Residents sat in shocked silence as they were told they've been breathing in toxic substancesfrom the old mine site for decades.

"I want to tell you that we're not downplaying this," Environment Minister Charlene Johnson said. "We don't have enough information to make a conclusion yet."

Buchans is built around an old lead and zinc mine that shutdown in the 1980s.

Residents and town officials have since been demanding that the site be cleaned up.

AbitibiBowater, which had been a partner in the mine, had planned to spend more than $2 million on remediation work, but that didn't go ahead when the company applied for bankruptcy protection earlier this year.

Residents of Buchans were called to a public meeting Tuesday night to hear the results of testing done on and around the old mine site. ((CBC))

At Tuesday night's meeting, the provincial government ministers confirmed that the mine site is spreading potentially poisonous soil throughout the town.

Ten toxicsubstancesshowed up in tests, including arsenic, copper and uranium, but it's the amount of lead in the soil that has officials most concerned.

Health Minister Paul Oram said health officials arerecommending that all of the town's 800 residents be tested, especially children and pregnant women.

"We are [erring on the side]of caution here. The tests that we've done, or that environment has done thus far, haveshown ... that there's reason to be concerned."

The government is also promising to start cleaning up the site in the spring.

Buchan's Mayor Derm Corbett said that's a relief.

"It was devastating to the community," Corbett said, "that it looked like another generation of Buchans residents would have to live with this."

The province also plans to expand the testing, tostudy the soil in public areas such as playgrounds.