Shawnigan Lake Petition

Drive it down to Victoria and dump it on the legislature lawn. Can't believe they would even consider this with how important our water and fish are to us. Also with all the people who live on the lake and swim in it. I swim there and fish there all summer as we have a place up there.

Signed
Rempy
 
First time I heard of this.

Signed

Kunni
 
Signed. What the hell are they thinking? Pickup the phone and let them know that this is not okay!
 
UN FRICKN" BELIEVABLE!! Signed and sent.Lived on the lake for several years,and believe me it has enough troubles
with all the development around it and summer traffic.
 
I just wanted to report back back that dumping of toxic waste in our watershed at Shawnigan lake has started as of last week on the south island despite opposition from community. We have seen a number of trucks on the malahat coming in out last few days it is sickening. Many also are unmarked to avoid protesters.

We as a community just could not convince our liberal government to stopping this to protect our water and environment. They did agree to have a hearing next month based on objection from CVRD, and our residents association, and we were told they would hold off. But the appeals division allowed dumping to begin ahead of hearing.

The construction waste that is coming up here is from the Victoria and south island area as they don't want it in there area. Some of this waste is even from old gas stations etc if you can believe it.It is completely shameful that people have turned there back on our community. It is only a matter of time as this goes on where shawnigan creek will carry pollutants from this site into our lake/aquifers. Many of residents including our household draw water from that lake for our drinking water. Shawnigan Creek is also home to many coho salmon which have been growing in numbers in recent years.

We are thankful to have some people speaking for us but as usual the liberals just didn't listen. Have a listen this was a response in the BC legislature at throne speech this week:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Ed5XZUDBZU

If you are interested in donating to help fight with a legal fund please visit the SRA website they have set up a fund http://www.thesra.ca/. I encourage anyone on the south island to pressure your MP's. If our lake goes down there will be no lake for anyone in the summer, and may laso lead to a dead river something we don't need. And just so you guys know the shawnigan creek I speak of passes by the dumping site... Literally right beside it...

I just thought I would share......
 
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Big group tent

hello,
signed.... great information. i did not hear about that kind of blog before that .
well , very nice info.keep it up.
 
Great! - Shawnigan Lake, the new Love Canal. Did you guys not vote Liberal or something?

If you were a small guy doing work with toxic materials, they would put you through huge hoops with concerns about concrete catchment basins, run off and ground contamination etc. But if the Govt. wants to get rid of huge quantities of contaminated soil, no problem.
 
Heads up please watch guys give you some background on the issue , and sheds light on the Greater Victoria Region and Sooke lake watershed.

[nzaVB4gbGdo] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nzaVB4gbGdo&feature=youtu.be
 
are there any first nations reserves in that area? seems like first nations are the only ones the government will ever back down to. maybe they could throw up a roadblock. bet it would get attention in a hurry.
 
A great visual of map especially for Victoria area to see. You can see what the impact to Victoria watershed not just us. The map shows a great detailed view of the site and elevations. Notice how sooke lake and shawnigan elevations are way smaller vs the site. Everything flows downhill...

http://brentatthefocus.blogspot.ca/?m=1
 
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by Peter Rusland - Cowichan News Leader Pictorial
posted Apr 29, 2014 at 12:00 PM— updated Apr 29, 2014 at 2:16 PM

Provincial appeal-board hearings, probing a permit to treat five-million tonnes of toxic soil near Shawnigan Lake, now reach into June, regional officials say.

“Environmental Appeal Board hearings were scheduled for four weeks,” said Rob Hutchins, chairman of the Cowichan Valley Regional District, whose lawyers are fighting SIA’s permit, along with lawyers for the Shawnigan Lake Residents Association.

“More time has been required. It is my understanding there are three days of hearings this week, but it will not be until June (due to scheduling snags) that the hearings will be reconvened and concluded.”

Meanwhile South Island Aggregates boss Marty Block emailed the News Leader Pictorial Saturday, explaining his gravel-quarry firm is alive, despite reports to the contrary.

He said things are quiet at its Stebbings Road pit — where Victoria has let an initial 40,000 tonnes of dirty dirt to be hauled —due to slow markets, and press attention during the appeal.

“We are not going anywhere, just downsizing,” he writes.

“We are very quiet in the quarry, partly due to the picketing and the media coverage. Contractors don’t want to be on the air, and the market is soft right now, so we are sending some gear to auction; it is the prudent thing to do.

“It is with heavy hearts that we have lost some key staff that have been with us for eight years, mainly due to protesters and market conditions,” explains Block. “But to make myself very clear we are not closing.”

South-end residents and local leaders are following the emotional, data-rich appeal hearings that followed environment-ministry bureaucrat Hubert Bunce issuing SIA its 50-year treatment permit last summer. Bunce made his ruling after reading technical reports and submissions from some 300 folks fearing pit run-off will foul the lake and area drinking water.

CVRD’s lawyers have called soil-treatment and hydro-geography pros to the hearings “to show expert testimony is not supportive of the permit, the way it was developed, and the ability of the company to live up to permit conditions,” Shawnigan Director Bruce Fraser said.

The CVRD also awaits a B.C. Supreme Court ruling on if Victoria properly recognized Cowichan’s zoning bylaws in issuing SIA’s permit, noted Fraser.

Taxpayer costs for CVRD lawyers was unavailable by press time. However, the SRA announced Monday that its Legal Action Fund, had this month raised an additional $45,000 thanks to the efforts of Shawnigan Lake School and the community at large.

The SRA stated it had raised a total of $200,000, and estimated its expenses could exceed $250,000.
 
From Times Colonist Today:

Comment: Shawnigan fighting to protect its drinking water

This is the true, and at times unbelievable, story of a community fighting for its future. The ending of this story has not yet been written, but for the people of Shawnigan Lake, the only acceptable ending is one in which five million tonnes of contaminated soil are not dumped in their watershed.

This story begins in May 2012, when the community received notification that South Island Aggregates was applying for a permit from the Environment Ministry to accept 100,000 tonnes of contaminated soil a year for 50 years at its gravel mine site on Stebbings Road. The mine is on a hillside above the south end of Shawnigan Lake. Shawnigan Creek, the main feeder creek to the lake, runs directly through the SIA property. The lake provides drinking water for 7,000 Shawnigan residents.

More than 200 local residents attended a public information meeting in May 2012, and about 350 people attended a public meeting in July 2012. At these meetings, the opposition to the plan presented by SIA was almost unanimous, with only two parties voicing support: a woman named Nikki (later revealed to be SIA owner Marty Block’s daughter) and Michael Harry, the chief of the Malahat First Nation.

The greatest concern to the people is the threat to the drinking water; the contaminants listed in the permit include dioxins, furans, phenols and a myriad other toxins and chemicals known to be harmful to human health.

The people of Shawnigan Lake were supposed to be reassured by the claim made by Jeff Taylor from Active Earth, the engineering company hired by SIA, that their watershed would be protected by a 76-metre layer of “virtually impermeable bedrock” underneath the site.

The middle of the story has been tragically predictable. Despite the overwhelming resistance in the community and the opposition expressed directly to the Ministry of Environment, the ministry issued the permit on Aug. 21, 2013. Among the list of opponents were the Cowichan Valley Regional District, the Capital Regional District, MP Jean Crowder, MLA Bill Routley, provincial Liberal candidate Steve Housser along with candidates for all the other parties, the Vancouver Island Health Authority and provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall. In all, there were 300 written submission to the ministry raising concerns related to the potentially negative environmental, health and social impacts.

Now we are in the third act. The Shawnigan Residents’ Association and the CVRD, along with local residents John and Lois Hayes and Rick Saunders have filed appeals to the Environmental Appeal Board. Lawyers representing the SIA, as well as lawyers for the Ministry of Environment, are defending the permit.

We have learned a great deal during the six weeks of EAB hearings, confirming many fears of Shawnigan residents.

We’ve learned that there is no “virtually impermeable bedrock” under the site. Instead, there is indeed an aquifer and fractured bedrock, with significant movement of water through the rock. Eight independent geo-scientists and engineers testified about the project, all saying there was inadequate information about the site and a disturbing lack of planning.

We’ve learned from engineer Lalith Liyanage, who assessed the water-treatment facilities at SIA, that it is a “water treatment design that raises a lot of questions and some fairly significant doubts as to whether it can successfully handle the scale of water contamination that it may have to address under both operating and post-closure conditions.”

In a community where opposition has been overwhelming, we have learned that the only public support that SIA received, which was from the Malahat First Nation, was cemented in a “confidential agreement” between the two parties, which provided for a list of expensive favours from the SIA in return for the Malahat support.

Environment Ministry Mary Polak, referring to the sewage treatment plan for Victoria, has stated that she will not force a project on to an unwilling community. We in Shawnigan intend to hold her to that.

The hearings will continue this week. If the EAB panel chooses to revoke the permit, it will be an ending to this story that the people of Shawnigan Lake will celebrate. If the panel chooses to uphold the permit, the people of this small community, who have raised more than $200,000 for legal fees, will appeal the ruling. To give up this fight — a fight for clean, drinkable water — would be to give up on the future of Shawnigan Lake.

Sonia Furstenau is a high school teacher at Dwight School in Shawnigan Lake.

© Copyright Times Colonist
- See more at: http://www.timescolonist.com/opinio...drinking-water-1.1098750#sthash.cHHpBL3e.dpuf
 
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