Residents in Yukon's Silver City area fight to keep their local waste transfer station - Action News
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Residents in Yukon's Silver City area fight to keep their local waste transfer station

Some Yukoners living in the Silver City area aren't happy the Yukon Government will soon close their local waste transfer station. They say they weren't consulted, though the minister responsible says they were.

Some residents say they weren't consulted, minister says they were

A row of garbage dumpsters
The waste transfer station in Silver City, Yukon, is one of a handful of unsupervised dumping sites that are being closed by the Yukon Government. Some area residents are trashing the plan. (Suzanne Tremblay)

First it was Keno City, Yukon. Next up Silver City, Braeburn, and Johnson's Crossing.

Those are the unincorporated communities in the Yukon that are soon going tolose theirwaste transfer stations somethingthat's not sitting well with some people who live in those areas.

It comes as part of the territorialgovernment's aimto modernizewaste management facilities across the Yukon.

SuzanneTremblay lives in the Silver City area, near Haines Junction, Yukon, and is among a group of local residents trying to fight the closure of their local station.Tremblay told CBC News that the decision was made by the territorial government before consulting with the community.

"We've been asking for three years now to be consulted," Tremblay said.

"[Community Services Minister Richard] Mostyn told us word for word, 'there will be no consultation. We've already consulted.' If you consulted with us, none of us remember in any of the communities."

Tremblaysaid the lack of public consultation prompted some area residents to senda letter to the premier's office last week.

The letter, signed by 130 people, demands that the governmentreconsiderremovingSilver City's waste transfer station, and also slams the minister of Community Services for not engaging with residents on this issue.

"What we're telling them is to back off," Tremblay said.

"We're more than willing to bring up some solutions and some cost-effective, environmentally-friendly solutions, but they need to work with us."

We've consulted, says minister

Community Services Minister Richard Mostynsays it's not true that Silver City residents have not been consulted. Hetold CBC News that heand his team have been thereto discuss a waste management plan for afterthe bins areremoved from the community. He says thatthree local meetings have been held.

Mostyn also said his predecessor as Community Services minister, John Streicker,visited the community to discuss the issuebefore Mostyn took over.

"I have had lots of conversations both on the phone, through emails, and in person with residents from Silver City, Burwash, and Destruction Bay over the last 18 months," Mostynsaid.

Man standing infront of Canadian militar personnel
Yukon's minister of Community Services, Richard Mostyn, seen here in 2021, said he is committed to working with residents of Silver City on a waste management plan once the bins are removed from the community. (Vincent Bonnay/Radio-Canada)

Mostyn said the Silver City waste transfer station will close, and it's now just a matter of time.

"Residents of Silver City will have to take their garbage to one of the regional landfills in the vicinity," he said.

"More than likely they'll go to the community where they buy their gas and food. So that will probably be a place like Haines Junction. So we're working with the Haines Junction council to create a payment regime so that Haines Junction is compensated for the extra garbage coming in."

Mostynsaid a workshop is being held later this month for members of his department and residents of Silver City to continue the discussion towardnext steps.

"Maybe we'll put a spring clean-up bin in Silver City," he said.

"Have staff there, and they will collect spring garbage that will then be taken out of the communityto one of the regional landfills once a year. And the other place is maybe leaving some of our regional landfill in these areas open a little bit longer to give people a little bit more time to get their garbage into the landfills."

The premier did not respond to CBC News' request for an interview about the letter.