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  #1  
Old Posted Nov 26, 2019, 5:21 PM
Gurnett71 Gurnett71 is offline
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Chedoke Creek Sewage Leak

Did a cursory search and was surprised that this topic hasn't been posted. Spec broke the story a few days ago, but its behind a paywall so reverted to the CBC story:

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamil...leak-1.5366811

The City of Hamilton says one of its sewage overflow tanks leaked an estimated 24 billion litres of storm runoff and sewage into Chedoke Creek over more than four years.

The spill works out to about four per cent of the annual volume of flow to the city's wastewater treatment plants, according to a media release.

"It's kind of horrifying and it's also really profoundly disappointing and kind of sad that this has happened and that nobody noticed for that amount of time," said Lynda Lukasik, executive director of Environment Hamilton.

"This will end up going through the courts and the city could face fines under provincial legislation," she added. "Depending on what the ministry's investigation uncovers we taxpayers may be on the hook for a substantial fine."

Residents only learned of the leak which was allowing untreated wastewater to flow into the creek in July 2018, when the city says staff discovered it. But an investigation revealed a bypass gate, which was supposed to be fully closed, had been left about five per cent open on Jan. 28, 2014.

"Despite extensive investigations, the City has not been able to determine why the bypass gate was opened," states the release.

Once the spill was discovered, the city says it stopped the discharge and began cleaning up the area.

Staff reported the spill to the Ministry of Environment, Conservation and Parks (MECP), which issued orders under the Environmental Protection Act and is continuing to investigate.

Ministry issued 2nd order to city on Nov. 14
Gary Wheeler, a spokesperson for the MECP, said the ministry's role is to ensure the city is doing everything it needs to in order to clean up the spill and ensure the sewage tank is fixed so no further leaks can happen

The ministry ordered the city to undertake several steps including evaluating the amount that was spilled and timelines for remediation and report back by August 15, 2018, he said. Hamilton was also required to identify all sewer overflow locations and evaluate the need for improved monitoring and reliability.

Wheeler added that a second order was also issued to the city on Nov. 14, calling for clarification and confirmation around things like impacts, remediation recommendations and monitoring.

He declined to provide any other information about the investigation.

"Hamilton City Council takes this matter very seriously and today is sharing additional information that has become available based on the City's investigations," stated the city in its release, which came out shortly before the Hamilton Spectator published a story based on confidential reports about the spill.

A call for more 'more rigorous checks'
The city explained that like many other "older cities" Hamilton has a combined sewer system that's used to collect both storm water runoff and sewage from homes — both of which were leaked into the creek.

The waterway flows into Cootes Paradise, a marsh that a variety of agencies have spent millions trying to restore and clean up over many years.

Lukasik pointed out that the combined sewer overflow (CSO) tanks are an important part of that massive rehabilitation effort.

They work by collecting sewage and runoff during the spring melt or extreme rain events and storing it, so it can be processed later. But the leak meant one of the tanks that was supposed to be saving the waterfront from damage was actually storing up harmful material only to release it directly into the water it was supposed to protect.

"That sure as heck is not what that tank is designed to do," she explained. "It says to me that there's obviously a need for more rigorous checks and balances at these CSO tanks to make sure this kind of thing doesn't happen."


After the spill the city warned residents that water in Chedoke Creek and Cootes Paradise had high levels of E. coli. (City of Hamilton)
In response to the spill the city says it has taken several actions including retaining an external consultant to review the environmental impacts of the leak and make recommendations about how to remediate the creek.

The city says that expert's work was peer-reviewed by a second consultant, but that both people believe more investigation is required.

Staff have also carried out enhanced inspections of all sewage overflow facilities and an inventory of all valves and control points and reviewed the procedures for the city's response to spills.

City says E. coli levels have dropped
The city describes Chedoke Creek as an "urban watercourse," meaning it already collects runoff and sewage discharge during large storms. Therefore, public health officials are recommending against using any waterways linked to it for things like canoeing or fishing. Signs warning people to stay away are in place and will remain there "indefinitely" says the city.

"Since this came to the attention of the City, staff have continued to monitor water quality in impacted areas of Chedoke Creek," said the city in its press release, adding that work has shown improvements in water quality and odour within weeks of stopping the spill. "Sample results show a dramatic decrease in E.coli levels for the parameters tested, and the results were similar to the levels before the discharge within weeks of stopping the discharge."

The city is also promising to provide updates to council and the public on the MECP investigation.

And the city's councillors responses on why it took until recently to disclose this leak:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamil...pill-1.5368065
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  #2  
Old Posted Jun 30, 2021, 8:23 PM
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New report on Chedoke Creek proposes at least $150M to improve water quality into 2035
Councillors are set to discuss a report from GM Blueplan Engineering on Monday

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamil...XaQxig-5NnpiZg

A new report recommends the city spend more than $150 million over 14 years to make up for the 24 billion litres of sewage and stormwater that spilled into Chedoke Creek between 2014 and 2018.

The report from GM Blueplan Engineering, obtained by CBC News, is set to appear at a general issues committee meeting on Monday.

It lists five key causes to the "significant impacts" at the creek, including:

* Combined sewer overflows (CSOs) flowing directly into the water.
* Wash-off and potential spills from Highway 403 and the railway and rail yard.
* Potential leachate contamination from landfill.
* The Urban Stormwater System consisting of largely untreated stormwater runoff.

"While these challenges are not uncommon to many legacy systems across Ontario and North America, the legacy water quality issues within Chedoke Creek are of additional interest due to the creek's location and function within the broader Cootes Paradise and Hamilton Harbour system," the report says, noting the majority of the impact comes from CSOs and stormwater runoff.
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  #3  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2021, 4:43 PM
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I believe the city is still tracking down sewage pipes illegally (or mistakenly) connected to the storm sewer system, in areas where storm water and sewers are separated. That has also affected water quality in Chedoke Creek.
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Old Posted Aug 25, 2021, 6:02 PM
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Sewergate: Ministry approves city’s pollution plan for Cootes Paradise

https://www.thespec.com/news/hamilto...-paradise.html
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  #5  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2022, 12:40 AM
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Chedoke Creek dredging operation to begin on Wednesday
The city estimates the project will take four months or less to complete and aims to be finished by Dec. 31

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamil...3EDjfDcgqyVXtI

The city announced Tuesday that it is ready to begin "in-water targeted dredging work" in Chedoke Creek.

The city estimates the project will take four months or less to complete and aims to be finished by Dec. 31 at the latest. The city hired Milestone Environmental Contracting Inc. to complete the work for just under $6 million.

In a Tuesday statement, the city said that residents in the Cootes Paradise area may notice an "increased level of truck traffic" on Macklin Street North, and construction sites on Longwood Road South, and near the Desjardin Trail.

Kay Drage Park and the access trail behind the Nicholas Mancini Centre will both be closed for the duration of the project.

On Thursday afternoon, the Desjardin pedestrian bridge will be closed while the dredging machinery is placed in the creek.

The dredging crew will work on dredging the creek from 7a.m. until 7p.m. until the project is complete.
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  #6  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2022, 9:52 PM
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Not so fast... last minute "request"


Hamilton asked to delay Chedoke Creek dredging
Representatives of Six Nations hereditary leaders request “pause” in project to allow for Indigenous consultation.


https://www.thespec.com/news/hamilto...x-nations.html

By Matthew Van Dongen
The Hamilton Spectator
Thu., Aug. 18, 2022

The city has been asked to pause its cleanup of sewage-soaked Chedoke Creek to consult with representatives of Six Nations hereditary leaders.

Hamilton was scheduled to put a dredging machine in the water of the creek that feeds into Cootes Paradise Thursday.

But three members of the Haudenosaunee Development Institute (HDI) have since parked a car on the bridge leading into the dredging prep site at Kay Drage Park and have asked for “a pause” in the project, said spokesperson Aaron Detlor.

The city has yet to respond to Spectator requests for comment, but Hamilton police were on site and speaking to the Haudenosaunee representatives around noon.

Detlor said he was not planning to “physically block” the site.

“I’m not standing in the way of anyone,” he said, reiterating the group is trying to engage with the city and assert Indigenous treaty rights.

“The police are aware of our treaty rights. They know we have a right to be here.”

The group arrived in conjunction with a news release from the HDI calling for the province and Metrolinx to “meaningfully engage” with Indigenous leaders on planned new rail lines throughout historical Haudenosaunee territory.

In general, the arm of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy has increasingly criticized the city for not consulting on a broad range of issues, including harbourfront land sales and a proposed widening of the Red Hill Valley Parkway.

Indigenous treaty rights are a complicated topic across Ontario and Canada.

Locally, Hamilton is covered by the Dish with One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant treaty with the Anishinaabe, Mississaugas and Haudenosaunee.

The Between the Lakes Purchase treaty with the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation of 1792 also applies to the city. These treaties are recognized in a land acknowledgement read out by the chairs of municipal meetings.
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  #7  
Old Posted Aug 18, 2022, 11:00 PM
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Just because you can, doesn't mean you should..
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  #8  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 1:07 AM
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What an unnecessary hold-up. RHVP widening I sort of get, but getting in the way of cleaning a contaminated marsh? That's just causing a fuss for the sake of it...
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  #9  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 11:59 AM
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This has got to be about other issues, as hinted in the Spec story. It's a pressure point that's available for the "Institute" to squeeze, with little risk to anything but the cleanup effort.
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  #10  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2022, 3:00 PM
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it probably comes back to the issues in Caledonia last year and them looking to reach further and squeeze more points.
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  #11  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2022, 8:46 PM
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Work proceeded anyway.

The politics around this and other issues will proceed as well. The province's messaging basically leaves the issue to the city, but the city is bound by provincial timelines so it's stuck in the middle on this one.

Interesting looking machine though.


Hamilton proceeds with Chedoke dredging amid Indigenous complaints
The city of Hamilton’s project aims to suck up 22,000 tonnes of sewage slug from creek after massive four-year leak


Teviah Moro
The Hamilton Spectator
Mon., Aug. 22, 2022

https://www.thespec.com/news/hamilto...ty-rights.html




A dredging machine has splashed into sewage-polluted Chedoke Creek for a $6-million cleanup job amid complaints by Six Nations hereditary leaders over a lack of consent under treaty rights.

A crew coaxed the dredger off a flatbed truck before an operator manoeuvred its hydraulic back legs and front shovel to drag it from the grassy shore into the shallow creek Monday.

The city has blocked public access to Kay Drage Park, which workers will use as a preparation area for the task of sucking up 22,000 tonnes of sewage sludge, a process that’s expected to wrap up in December.

...

On Thursday, members of the Haudenosaunee Development Institute (HDI) asked the city to hold off on the project to allow for consultation.

In an email to the city Monday, spokesperson Aaron Detlor said the municipality hadn’t “obtained consent to advance” from HDI, which represents the Haudenosaunee Confederacy Chiefs Council.

That’s a “clear indication” that the city “is not interested in proceeding in good faith,” Detlor wrote.

“Your decision to move forward without attempting to obtain consent will certainly impact our discussions with the City of Hamilton and its representatives on this and other matters of interest and concern.”

...

Local officials didn’t immediate respond to The Spectator’s requests for comment, but previously a spokesperson said the city had communicated with First Nations on the dredging and provided the HDI with project documents.

Moreover, Matthew Grant said, the city has “zero authority not to comply” with the provincial cleanup order.

In early July, the city wrote to the Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks (MECP) to ask the province how it wanted to handle the issue of consent, which the HDI had raised in 2021.

“This is not an issue that the city can address on behalf of the MECP.”

Asked for comment, a ministry spokesperson told The Spectator in an email it “has no role in providing guidance in this matter,” adding the city “is responsible for managing community concerns.”

...

At the site Monday, a worker with Eco Technologies, which dipped the Amphibex 400 into the creek near a footbridge that connects waterfront trail users to Cootes Paradise, said more prep work was required before dredging could start.

The dredging is to start at the north end of Chedoke and progress south toward Kay Drage Park to vacuum up sewage-soaked sediment from the creek bed.

The muck is to be sent through a pipeline to a management area in the park. Once separated from the sediment, the water is to be pumped into a sanitary sewer to be treated at the wastewater plant. The dried sediment will be trucked to a dump.


Paywall removed:
https://12ft.io/proxy?q=https%3A%2F%...ty-rights.html
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  #12  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2022, 8:58 PM
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A video was added, and some changes to the text. It will be interesting to see what HDI's next trip to the site will bring. I take Detlor's point, an information dump is not "meaningful" engagement, but good faith in the process is a two-way street. It would be interesting to know how the city approached it regarding this issue -- who did they speak with among the Indigenous community?


Video Link


...

On Monday, spokesperson Aaron Detlor said the HDI, which represents the Haudenosaunee Confederacy Chiefs Council, isn’t against cleaning up Chedoke but lacks details of the dredging plan.

“We haven’t been given any opportunity to determine if this is in the best interest of the creek.”

Hamilton is covered by the Dish with One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant treaty with the Anishinaabe, Mississaugas and Haudenosaunee. The Between the Lakes Purchase treaty with the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation of 1792 also applies to the city.

In a brief emailed response, a city spokesperson said staff “are still consulting with various key stakeholders” and noted no date has been set for the start of dredging.

Last week, the city said it had communicated with First Nations and provided the HDI with project documents. As well, the city has “zero authority not to comply” with the provincial cleanup order.

In early July, the city wrote to the Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks (MECP) to ask the province how it wanted to handle the issue of consent, which the HDI had raised in 2021. “This is not an issue that the city can address on behalf of the MECP.”

Asked for comment, a ministry spokesperson told The Spectator in an email it “has no role in providing guidance in this matter,” adding the city “is responsible for managing community concerns.”

Detlor, who is a lawyer, meanwhile, draws a distinction between providing documents and engagement. “If I take a bunch of scientific documents right now and drop them off at your desk, does that make my engagement with your meaningful, if you have no capacity to review those documents or understand them?”

He added HDI members would “likely” make a second trip to the Chedoke dredging site after their initial visit Thursday. “And now that we’ve seen that Hamilton doesn’t want to engage in good faith, I’m bringing more people with me.”

Detlor said the city’s approach to the Chedoke project will affect other matters, including a potential widening of the Red Hill Valley Parkway. “Those discussions are almost completely off the table right now.”

...
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  #13  
Old Posted Nov 30, 2023, 3:25 PM
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Hamilton needs a home for about 16,000 tonnes of contaminated sediment from Chedoke Creek
The city dredged enough sediment to fill 3 Olympic sized swimming pools

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/hamil...ging-1.7041392

Two weeks ago, Hamilton finished dredging about 16,000 tonnes of contaminated sediment from Chedoke Creek — but now the city needs to find a home for almost all of it.

Nick Winters, director of Hamilton Water, told CBC Hamilton in an email the city offloaded eight loads to the GFL landfill in Stoney Creek, as it was the "most time-effective approach" to meet the province's Dec. 31 deadline, but the landfill had to stop accepting the material after questions from Ontario's Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks (MECP).

Now the city has to find a landfill that will accept the remaining 392 loads of waste within the deadline and on budget.

Hamilton spent $10.4 million and spent four months dredging the creek, collecting enough sediment to fill three Olympic-sized swimming pools.

The dredging started after the province ordered the clean up after 24 billion litres of sewage and stormwater spilled into the creek.

The city pleaded guilty to charges laid by the MECP in July and paid nearly $3 million in fines and damages for allowing the spill to occur.
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  #14  
Old Posted Nov 30, 2023, 3:27 PM
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It's shit water, soooo couldn't they just process the water at the wastewater treatment plants?
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  #15  
Old Posted Nov 30, 2023, 9:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SteelTown View Post
It's shit water, soooo couldn't they just process the water at the wastewater treatment plants?
The Spec's version notes the dredged material has been drying in tubes in Kay Drage Park. So maybe it's not suitable for processing at Woodward?

You'd think MECP would have initially ok'ed this plan though. Perhaps the right and left arms of the ministry are not properly connected.


Quote:
But after eight truckloads — of an anticipated 400 — were transported there last week, GFL stopped accepting the material after the Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks “inquired” about the landfill, the city says.

“We found out from our contractor that essentially GFL turned them away at the gate,” Cari Vanderperk, the city’s director of watershed management, said Wednesday.

It boiled down to a “misunderstanding” between the ministry and the project team of how the Chedoke waste was classified, Vanderperk said.

Based on analysis, the project team deemed the dried sewage-laced material to be “solid contaminated nonhazardous sediment,” while the ministry suggested it was “waste from a municipally owned sewage works.”

The latter “conflicted” with GFL’s environmental compliance approval permissions for the landfill, which is off the Upper Centennial Parkway on Green Mountain Road West.

...

The city has until Dec. 31, however, to dispose of the dredged material, which has been drying in geotextile tubes in a work area set up in Kay Drage Park since July, when a machine started sucking up sewage sludge from the creek.

The Stoney Creek landfill — which has also been on the ministry’s radar for odour complaints by area residents — was preferable due to its proximity to Chedoke Creek and Dec. 31 deadline to dispose of the material.

“Obviously, the farther out we go, the longer it takes to transport the material, the more trucks we would have on the road,” Vanderperk said.

In coming days, the project team expects to find another landfill with the capacity and environmental permissions to take the Chedoke sediment with options in Ontario and one in Niagara Falls, N.Y., she noted.
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  #16  
Old Posted Nov 30, 2023, 9:31 PM
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Reverse green bin program incoming. They take your kitchen scraps but leave you with a bucket of dried muck.
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  #17  
Old Posted Dec 1, 2023, 7:53 PM
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Sounds like fertilizer for all the city garden beds is sorted for the next few years
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  #18  
Old Posted Jan 3, 2024, 2:45 PM
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I won't bother posting parts of the story, but apparently the last truck hauled our sh!t to the dump Dec 30, just before the ministry deadline. The whole thing is still expected to be within budget, despite the additional cost of transportation.


Last of Chedoke sewage waste trucked to landfill
Despite change in site, City of Hamilton meets province's deadline


https://www.thespec.com/news/hamilto...3b06de4c5.html

Teviah-Moro
The Hamilton Spectator
Wednesday, January 3, 2024



It's probably inevitable something like this happens again in the future, but let's hope it won't hit the fan for a long, long time.

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