Lake Echo residents 'flabbergasted' by proposed waste site - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Lake Echo residents 'flabbergasted' by proposed waste site

People who live in the Lake Echo area say they're concerned about a proposed waste processing facility.

Demolition already piling up

Mike Thomas said he didn't know about the proposed development in his neighbourhood until he walked by a sign announcing the application. (CBC)

People who live in the Lake Echo area say they're concerned material is already piling up at the site of aproposed waste processing facility, before it's been approved by the city.

Mike Thomas said he didn't know about the proposed development, just down the road from his home, until he walked by a sign announcing the application for a construction and demolition waste processing facility.

"I was shocked," he said. "Why didn't we know about this when the process started four months ago?"

A company called Kiann Management has applied to the city to rezone the 15-hecatrelot, anarearecently razed by forest fires. Kiann did not respond to CBC's request for a comment.

Thomasheld acommunity meeting about the project this week where he says about150 people showed up.He's also started a petition to stop development of the site.

"People have a lot of concerns about traffic, of course the environment, property values," he said.

The project is still months away from approval,but demolition debrisis alreadypiling up.

"We were flabbergasted actually.I mean there's concrete,rebar, wire,conduit, burnt garbage bags," said Thomas.

DavidHendsbee, thecouncillorfor thearea, says some of thedebris came from theGordon Bell Annex in Cole Harbour, which was demolished this winter.

Kianncarried out the contract and dumped the debris at the Lake Echo site.

"My understanding is that the owner plans to reprocess the concrete, to break it down to a gravel aggregate, and also to reclaim the rebar that's in it," Hendsbeesaid.

The Department of Environment says itreceivedtwocomplaints last week about dumping at thesite. It says it plans to send investigators to check out the site andtalk to the owner of the propertysometime this week.

Shortly after photos of the dumped debris hit social mediathe site was covered up.

A public meeting about the developmentwill be held next month.