July 5, 2002
Up in smoke
Iqaluit residents fuming
because city is still burning garbage
DENISE
RIDEOUT
One year after a local
environmental group called on the city to stop burning garbage at Iqaluits
dump, black clouds of smoke are still billowing into the sky above the city.
And that has the group,
Citizens for a Clean Iqaluit, wondering if theyll see the day when less
garbage goes up in flames.
Paul Crowley, a member
of Citizens for a Clean Iqaluit, closes his window before the wind can blow
the stench of burning garbage into his home. "Its still burning,"
Paul Crowley says. "Im looking at it right now."
Last July, the group of
concerned Iqaluit residents started lobbying city council to end its long-standing
practice of burning the heaps of trash piled up at the dump. Citizens for a
Clean Iqaluit argued that toxins produced by the open burning were detrimental
to peoples health, as well as to the water and land nearby.
The group also put pressure
on the citys administration to follow regulations set out in its municipal
water licence which required Iqaluit to stop burning plastics by June 1, 2001.
The water licence, issued by the Nunavut Water Board, also stipulated burning
be limited to food waste, paper, cardboard and untreated wood.
But the city was in the
midst of a labour dispute when the June 1 deadline rolled around and it didnt
have the capacity or the time to deal with water board regulations.
The city also struggled
with a lack of capital dollars that were needed to install an incinerator at
the dump a move that would have cut down on the open burning of garbage.
Crowley, who is trained
as a lawyer, even took the City of Iqaluit to court last summer to get an injunction
against the open-air burning.
The judge ruled against
Crowley, saying he failed to offer concrete proof that the burning was causing
irreparable harm to Iqaluit residents.
One year later, Citizens
for a Clean Iqaluit are frustrated that the trash is still going up in smoke.
"We wanted it to change
last June 1, when the water board put a limit on burning," Crowley said.
"Were disappointed that its still happening."
But Crowley is quick to
note city council has made strides to improve the situation.
Last year, for instance,
the city launched a paper recycling program for local businesses.
Then in December, a broader
recycling program that includes plastics and metals, was introduced to Iqaluit
households.
City council saw recycling
as a way to cut down on the amount of plastics, paper and metals ending up in
the trash pile.
Crowley agrees the recycling
programs are helping. But, he said, the recycling program needs some improvements.
"It should be made
mandatory. A voluntary recycling program is rarely effective. Theres still
a lot [of plastics and metals] going into the burn pile," he said.
Now, Citizens for a Clean
Iqaluit has a new campaign: to convince the city to stop burning garbage by
October. "The end of the construction season is what were hoping
for," Crowley said.
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