December 5, 2003
New sewage plant set for 2005
Replacing "white
elephant" will cost $5.5 million
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
The
scoop is Iqaluit's poop will have a new coop by fall 2005. (FILE PHOTO)
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Less than two years from
now, Iqaluit could have a new multi-million-dollar sewage treatment plant, if
the city's engineer gets his way.
Brad Sokach said he hopes
construction teams and engineers will begin work this summer and put the final
touches on the new plant by the fall of 2005.
Aside from the importance
of dealing with what he called the city's "white elephant," Sokach
said current pressure on the city's lagoon has made the plant project a priority
for the current administration.
"We'd like to get
rid of the sewage lagoon, more than anything else," Sokach said. "It's
an environmental issue.
"Our sewage lagoon
is designed for a far smaller population than we have now. So we don't get the
level of treatment that most communities do."
The new plant would actually
be an addition to the skeleton of the sewage processing building that stands
next to the sewage lagoon as testament to one of the city's biggest boondoggles.
Four years ago, Iqaluit spent more than $7 million on the plant, only to find
its concrete tanks were leaking, and floor of the electrical room was sagging.
Since then, the city has
spent thousands more to pay for reports on what went wrong and how to proceed.
The lack of a sewage treatment plant has also forced the city to pay a fine
to the federal government for polluting Frobisher Bay when the city's overused
lagoon spilled over.
The news of progress doesn't
come cheap. The revamped plant, recommended in the engineering report presented
to council on Nov. 26, will cost an estimated $5.5 million to set up. Sokach
said the money for the new treatment plant was earmarked in the capital plan
approved by ratepayers last year.
Sokach points out the engineering
firm that will carry out the project has yet to be chosen, and will ultimately
decide on the final design. He said last month's report was meant to tell administration
what kind of technology should be used and how much it will cost.
"The purpose of that
report [last month] was to put us on track," Sokach said.
The engineer who wrote
last month's report said his recommendations were the cheapest and most reliable
option. An earlier report showed it would cost only $820,000 to complete the
current plant in its original design, but would then cost up to $900,000 in
annual operating expenses because of the complex technology involved. The newly
designed plant would cost about $400,000 to run, less than half of the original
forecast.
The new plant will also
take Iqaluit's northern needs into account much better than the last design.
Barry Rabinowitz, a consultant
with the southern engineering firm CH2M HILL, which produced last month's report,
says his report suggests the city use a simpler technology that will be easier
to maintain and operate - and won't require wood chips.
Rabinowitz said the existing
technology in the plant - referred to as highly automated, membrane technology
- was extremely high quality, but was part of an apparatus meant for a region
where cheap forestry products are readily available.
Rabinowitz compared the
situation to the city buying a Ferrari when it needed a pickup truck. He speculated
that previous city councils were poorly informed on engineering issues.
"It's not bad technology,"
Rabinowitz said. "However, it wasn't the right technology.
"They [previous councils]
didn't know what they were getting into."
Rabinowitz's report recommends
the city budget a further $1.2 million to expand the plant's capacity over the
next 20 years. His plan would also salvage parts from the old plant, also he
couldn't say how much money this would save.
City administration hopes
to award the contract by January.
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