Ontario announces $85M to clean up mercury near Grassy Narrows, Wabaseemoong First Nations - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 12:02 AM | Calgary | -0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Thunder Bay

Ontario announces $85M to clean up mercury near Grassy Narrows, Wabaseemoong First Nations

A "historic" $85-million contribution from the Ontario government will fund the cleanup of mercury contamination near Grassy Narrows and Wabaseemoong First Nations in northern Ontario.

New funding will go to First Nations-led plan for full remediation of English-Wabigoon River

'This is a turning point,' says Ontario Environment Minister Glen Murray. (CBC)

Ontario will spend $85 million to clean up industrial mercury contamination that is poisoning the people atGrassy Narrows and WabaseemoongFirst Nations in northwestern Ontario, Environment MinisterGlen Murray announced on Tuesday.

The mercury was dumped into the river by Reed Paper, upstream of the First Nations in Dryden, Ont., in the 1960s and early 1970s. It has never been cleaned up.

That has resulted in more than90per cent of the population in the communities showing signs of mercury poisoning, according toresearch released in September2016 by Japanese expertswho have been studying the health of people there for decades.

"This really is ahistoric day in Ontario," Murray told CBC News in an interview. "The funding is there and it's going to be spent right away."

Remediation starts next year

Preparation work on the river will be completed this summer with remediation starting in early 2018, Murray said. The work will follow the course set by scientist John Rudd and be done in partnership with both First Nations, he said.

Grassy Narrows First Nation activist Judy Dasilva attends a 2012 rally in Toronto. People from the community have been pressing for the mercury to be cleaned up for decades. (Kevin Konnyu/picasaweb)

An additional $2.7 million is budgetedto accelerate work already underway on the river, according to the province.

Murray said the announcement came after two months of intensive work with the chiefs of Grassy Narrows and Wabaseemoong.

"This river is the lifeblood of my people," said Grassy Narrows Chief SimonFobisterin a statement on Tuesday evening. "For too long we have suffered from this preventable tragedy.May this be the beginning of a new era of hope for my people, and may justice flow at long last."

'Egregious historic tragedy'

"We were really racing to get it into cabinet andinto treasury board before the people went away [for the summer]," Murraysaid of the timing of the surprise announcement on Tuesday. "It's now real and we can start spending money."

For years, people at Grassy Narrows and Wabaseemoong have been pressing for the contamination to be cleaned up and for better health care forpeople suffering from mercury poisoning.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne recognized the "egregious historic tragedy," Murray said.

"This is a turning point," he said. "This is an omen that we can start treating First Nations with respect. If we can fix this one, maybe we can get a lot more justice and reconciliation in the future."

Fobistersaid he's pleased with the commitment but still worried, after such a long fight, that a change in government could cause the funding to dry up.

"Now we need to put the funds into a trust to make sure that this promise is fulfilled no matter who is in power," he said.

With files from The Canadian Press