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February 21, 2003
Sewage spill reeks of future
problems
Citys aging infrastructure
going down the tubes
CHARLOTTE
PETRIE
What likely began as a
slow leak in the Baffin Regional Hospitals main sewage line quickly turned
into a major spill when the aging pipe broke in half, releasing more than 10,000
litres of raw sewage last week.
City officials received
a call Feb. 9 from a sharp-eyed resident who reported water coming up from the
ground near the hospital. But although the severed pipe was patched up the following
day, the clean-up effort took an entire week.
Three heavy-equipment operators
began removing the contaminated ice from the site and dumping it at the local
sewage lagoon last Monday.
But when the utilidor crew
first arrived on the scene, they didnt know how extensive the spillage
was, foreman Chris Freda said.
"We thought we only
had a small spill, but I guess it had been seeping for a while," Freda
said.
"We never saw no steam
or indicators until Sunday. Nobody saw a leak. Nobody identified the leak. And
there was no sludge, no steam, no nothing until that Sunday," he added.
Hospital staff didnt
notice any problems with the pipes, either, as sewage continued to flow from
the building.
In an interview this week,
Rick Butler, the citys chief administrative officer, said the leak was
not a public-health concern.
"If there was a problem
we would have been told about it," he said. "[The sewage] is all frozen
so the ground is not in any way contaminated or the creek below it."
City staff contacted the
Northwest Territories spill hotline as soon as the spill was discovered. As
well, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and the Department of Indian Affairs
and Northern Development each sent an inspector to the site.
Butler called the incident
the biggest spill in Iqaluits recent history but maybe not the
last. He anticipates more of the same crap if the current state of the citys
deteriorating water and sewage system isnt drastically improved over the
next five to 10 years.
"Weve been complaining
about this to the [Nunavut] government for years and years, and we finally have
some money now to do all this work with," he said.
But getting that money
from the GN is contingent on persuading local ratepayers to go $4 million in
debt. The loan is required to top up the municipalitys current reserve
funds, taxes and fees of $15 million.
If the city does not kick
in $19 million, the GN will not relinquish the $31 million it promised Iqaluit
last December for infrastructure projects between 2003 and 2008.
The citys infrastructure
is almost 50 years old and badly in need of upgrading, Butler said. The municipalitys
five-year plan is designed to improve the citys landfill, roads, water
and sewage systems. However, the hospitals broken sewage pipe isnt
on that list. Its system will have to wait for the citys next five-year
plan.
"Part of the fix in
the next five years will include some pipes, but not these ones in particular.
The worst pipes are the ones well do first, and those arent the
worst. That offers a sense of how bad other pipes are," he explained.
However, municipal law
stipulates that council needs the support of the citys 1,300 ratepayers
before it can take on debt. A public meeting held in January revealed some ratepayers
were hesitant about going ahead with the deal, however, Butlers impression
of public opinion regarding the proposal is very different.
"[Council] finds it
all positive because weve thought that after five or 10 years of people
saying all these things that they need, this council and administration has
finally got a plan that stops the burning, gives them water, gives them pavement,
gives them roads, gives them a new landfill all the things they said
they needed," Butler explained.
"Most people are saying,
This is the best were going to get for $4 million of debt and $40
per year in tax increases. We havent heard other solutions other than
what we have, and that is, Lets get on with it."
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