Irving Pulp and Paper charged with dumping into St. John River - Action News
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New Brunswick

Irving Pulp and Paper charged with dumping into St. John River

Irving Pulp and Paper Limited has been charged with 15 counts of illegal dumping into the St. John River.

Fines could total millions if company is found guilty of dumping harmful substance at Saint John mill

Irving Pulp and Paper's west Saint John mill. The company is alleged to have released an unnamed pollutant into the river on 15 occasions over a two-year period ending in August. (CBC)

Irving Pulp and Paper Limited has been charged with 15 counts of illegal dumping into the St. John River.

The alleged federal Fisheries Act violations date from June 2014 through August 2016 and are said to have taken place at the company's mill at Reversing Falls in west Saint John.

In each case it is claimed the company released a "deleterious" substance into the river.

It raises a lot of questions.- Matt Abbott, New Brunswick Conservation Council

Theharmful substance has not been named.

Mary Keith, vice-president of J.D. Irving, Limited, said in a statement that the pulp mill is "currently in compliance with all environmental laws."

"Irving Pulp and Paper is reviewing the charges which relate to issues that were self-reported," Keith said.

The minimum fine for a large corporation under the most recent version of the Fisheries Actis $200,000 for each violation, in cases where there has been a previous conviction. Irving has earlier convictions.

If Irving is found guilty of all 15 charges the minimum penalty would be $3 million.

The company will be back in court Jan. 30 to enter a plea.

Matt Abbott ofthe Conservation Council of New Brunswick said the group will be following the case closely.

Previous convictions

"It raises a lot of questions," said Abbott, who works as the Fundy baykeeper out of the council's marine conservation office.

"Did someone know something was going on and then did it keep occurring, or was it stopped the minute it was found out about?"

Irving Pulp and Paper's previous convictions under the Fisheries Act were the result ofincidents in February and October 2007 in which black liquor and green liquor were released into the river.

The two substances are byproducts of the pulp and paper process and are harmful to fish.

The company was fined $37,000 and $75,000 for those two offences.