home who we are projects support us weekly feature newsroom community sitemap
 
Cameco landfill may be breaking provincial laws
by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper, Waterkeeper.ca Weekly
August 26, 2008
  

Sanford and Helen Anne Haskill point to the broken pipe discharging uranium and arsenic into Lake Ontario

The Welcome landfill is the focus of this week's podcast edition of Living at the Barricades. Click here to listen or subscribe to this weekly radio program.

Lake Ontario Waterkeeper has teamed up with Port Hope area residents to file an Application for Investigation alleging that Cameco Corporation may be breaking Ontario's environmental laws. The uranium company manages a radioactive waste site in Welcome, just outside of Port Hope. Earlier this spring, residents discovered that a 2.5-kilometre long pipe discharging wastewater into Lake Ontario has broken. The pipe now spews an alarming cocktail of uranium and arsenic onto a public beach.

"The Environmental Bill of Rights grants every Ontario resident a right to call upon the province to investigate violations of provincial law. In my experience, dumping uranium, arsenic and radium onto a public beach is about as clear a violation as you can get," says Waterkeeper and environmental lawyer Mark Mattson.

Samples collected from the pipe show uranium levels nearly 50 times higher the province's interim water quality objectives. Arsenic is nearly 5 times higher than what Ontario considers safe for human and aquatic life.

Living @ the Barricades: Podcasts
Listen to archived episodes of Waterkeeper's new radio show and free podcast. Updated Thursdays ...
Lafarge appeal
Learn more about Waterkeeper's appeal of the Lafarge Alternative Fuels licences ...
Edwards v. DTE Energy
Waterkeeper affiliates launch rare Fisheries Act prosecution of U.S.-based coal-fired power plant ...
Summer Beach Report
Learn more about swimming on Lake Ontario. See which beaches are posted and read about Ontario's water quality protection rules ...
Comment RE: Notice published on July 28,2008 in the Canada Gazette, Part 1.
by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper, Comment to the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency
August 27, 2008
  
Dear Mr. Smith, Lake Ontario Waterkeeper supports the proposed addition of projects that require a license under the International Boundary Waters Treaty Act (IBWTA) to the Law List Regulations and the Inclusion List Regulations of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act (CEAA). It is essential to ensure that all projects with potential environmental impacts for our lakes, rivers and oceans are...  (more)
(0 comments) Drink Environmental Law Fish Research Swim
Uranium mine talks at impasse in Toronto
by Frank Armstrong, The Kingston Whig Standard
August 27, 2008
  
Discussions between Algonquin anti-uranium mine activists and provincial bureaucrats remain at a standstill after a meeting in Toronto yesterday. Former Ardoch Algonquin First Nation chief Bob Lovelace and Ardoch Algonquin negotiator Jack Lapointe met with officials from Aboriginal Affairs and the Ministry of Northern Affairs and Mines about uranium prospecting occurring north of Sharbot Lake. The pair failed to convince...  (more)
(0 comments) Aggregate Environmental Law Fish Kingston and Region Nuclear Industry Ontario
Wind farm plan stirs up concerns
by Jennifer Pritchett, The Kingston Whig Standard
August 27, 2008
  
The wind farm proposed for Amherst Island could approach the size of one of the largest such facilities in Canada, now under construction on Wolfe Island. Kingston-based Gaia Power Inc. is developing the Amherst Island wind-power project, called Windlectric, in conjunction with Oakville-based Algonquin Power Management Inc. The project is expected to produce a maximum of 200 megawatts, or enough...  (more)
(0 comments) Fish Quinte Region
Cameco landfill may be breaking provincial laws
by Lake Ontario Waterkeeper, Waterkeeper.ca Weekly
August 26, 2008
  
The Welcome landfill is the focus of this week's podcast edition of Living at the Barricades. Click here to listen or subscribe to this weekly radio program. Lake Ontario Waterkeeper has teamed up with Port Hope area residents to file an Application for Investigation alleging that Cameco Corporation may be breaking Ontario's environmental laws. The uranium company manages a radioactive...  (more)
(0 comments) Drink Environmental Law Features Fish Landfills Nuclear Industry Port Hope, Cobourg, and Region Swim Waterkeeper.ca Weekly
Lafarge - ERT Decision Alarms Industry, Challenges MOE
by Willms & Shier
August 25, 2008
  
This article was written and published by Willms & Shier Environmental Lawyers LLP. To subscribe to their monthly newsletter, please visit www.willmsshier.com. The recent Divisional Court decision supporting neighbors and environmental advocates in opposing an MOE approval has raised concerns with industry associations and the Ministry of the Environment. The decision upheld the neighbours’ rights to appeal MOE’s approval allowing...  (more)
(0 comments) Aggregate Environmental Law Fish Industrial Emissions Kingston and Region Ontario
Read all the latest news