'We don't want your garbage': Northern township in shock after hearing Ontario is sending it radioactive waste - Action News
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'We don't want your garbage': Northern township in shock after hearing Ontario is sending it radioactive waste

Residents of a small northern Ontario township 40 minutes west of Sudbury say they were blindsided by Ontario's decision to transport radioactive waste in their community in the coming weeks. The municipalities are asking the province to halt the project.

Communities asking the province to halt its transport plan while it holds consultations

People sitting on chairs in a room.
Dozens of residents attended the emergency council meeting in Nairn and Hyman in northern Ontario on Monday over Ontario's plan to transport radioactive waste there. Some came from neighbouring municipalities, including a delegation from Whitefish River First Nation. (Aya Dufour/CBC News)

Residents of a small northern Ontario township 40 minutes west of Sudbury say they were blindsided by Ontario's decision to transport radioactive waste from an abandoned mill 200 kilometresaway to the tailing facilities intheir community in the coming weeks.

Nairn and Hyman, with a total of about 300 residents, became aware ofthe province's plan when work began on theback roads leading to the Agnew Lake Mine last month, after there hadn'tbeen much action on that property since the Ministry of Mines took over in the 1990s.

"This project has been in the works for years. Why are we only finding out about it now?" asked Nairnchief administrative officer Belinda Ketchabawsaid duringan emergency joint council meeting Monday.

The province's plan involves using the tailings on the property to store 40 tonnes of naturally occurring radioactive materials from the abandoned niobium ore processingmillnear Nipissing First Nation.

The mill operated for barely a few months before shutting down in the 1950sand its tailings contaminated soil in the First Nation in the decades that followed.

Remediation work there has been a long time coming, with the process of identifying and excavating the contaminated soil beginningin 2019.

The Ministry of Transportation (MTO) and the Ministry of Mines are now moving on to the next step, which involves hauling the radioactive materials elsewhere.

The tailings facility inNairn was chosen as it isalready designed to receive radioactive materials.It's beenholding radioactive waste and byproducts of the inactive Agnew Lake Mine for decades without incident. The tailings themselves are some 20 kilometers away from the centre of the township.

Townships ask province to halt transport, consult with them

At theemergency meetingbetween the townships of Nairn,Hymanand Baldwin, MTO area manager Darren Stephensonsaid the plan ultimately intended to be beneficial for the receiving community.

Stephenson said the niobium material coming from Nipissing First Nation is less radioactive than the materials currently being stored at the facility, and could act as a cap for the tailings before they are eventually covered with topsoil and revegetated.

A man talking
Ministry of Transportation spokesperson Darren Stephenson made an unexpected appearance at the emergency council meeting on Monday. He answered some of the council members' questions about the project. (Aya Dufour/CBC)

But NairnCoun. Trevor McVeyisn't convinced.

"It's like putting good garbage on bad garbage we don't want your garbage."

Councillors around the table may hold different views about the project, butall criticize the lack of communication from the province.

Ketchabaw feelsthe lack of transparency has fuelled mistrust about the province's intentions.

"They're telling us it's safe. Then why so much PPE[personal protective equipment]? Why so many safety protocols?"

Ketchabaw saidmore information is needed about how the transport and the storage could impact the environment and residents, andthe safety plans must be shared with local emergency services.

Nairn CAO Belinda Ketchabaw (right) reads a resolution during Nairn's council meeting on Monday.
Nairn CAO Belinda Ketchabaw, right, reads a resolution during Nairn's council meeting on Monday. (Aya Dufour/CBC News)

NairnMayor Amy Mazey echoed a similar feeling.

"We're hearing conflicting things. On the one hand it's naturally occurring and low risk, yet the safety protocols seem intensive. It just leaves us with more questions."

McVey saidthe Agnew Lake Mine tailings have been poorly maintained in previous yearsand fears this is something that will continue.

"They will forget about this site because it's here, in Nairn and Hyman," he said.

All saidthey could eventually be open to the project if they had more information.

Two people pose for a portrait outside of a municipal building.
Nairn and Hyman Mayor Amy Mazey and Baldwin Mayor Vern Gorham say more consultation is needed before the transport of the radioactive materials can go ahead. (Aya Dufour/CBC)

Asked why residents were only being told about this a few weeks from when the transportation was set to begin, Stephensonreplied he did not know.

He did, however, field several questions about the safety protocols that would be in place during the transport of the materials.

A town hall is set to take place in Nairn and Hyman in the coming weeks.