Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Feds to fund mercury treatment facility

- KRISTY KIRKUP ALLISON JONES AND

OTTAWA • The federal government has pledged to fund a treatment centre for an Ontario reserve plagued by mercury contaminat­ion.

Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott delivered the news to community leaders during a meeting Wednesday in Toronto that included Ontario Indigenous Relations Minister David Zimmer.

“We’ve been requesting this for years and years,” said Grassy Narrows Chief Simon Fobister.

“The government of Canada has stepped up to build this … mercury home and treatment centre for our people.”

The treatment centre is a “dream come true” and once it is built, those on the reserve suffering from the serious impacts of mercury contaminat­ion will no longer have to travel to such centres as Winnipeg or Kenora, Ont., to receive care, Fobister said.

“We were all happy and clapping our hands.”

Mercury contaminat­ion has plagued the EnglishWab­igoon River system in northweste­rn Ontario for half a century, since a paper mill in Dryden, Ont., dumped 9,000 kilograms of the substance into the river systems in the 1960s.

The symptoms of mercury poisoning include impaired peripheral vision, muscle weakness, impaired speech, hearing and cognitive function and numbness or stinging pain in the extremitie­s and mouth.

Speaking outside the House of Commons later Wednesday, Philpott said the community has long requested a treatment facility to address health issues related to mercury exposure.

All Canadians need to know the real challenges that Grassy Narrows, along with the nearby Wabaseemoo­ng (White Dog) First Nation, have faced for half a century, she added.

“This is what they need and should have and we are very happy to support them in it,” Philpott said. “I am going to be pushing my officials to get to work right away on the details.”

Earlier this month, the Ontario government reaffirmed in its fiscal plan that it will spend $85 million on the cleanup of the paper mill site upstream from Grassy Narrows where the mercury was first dumped.

Zimmer said Wednesday the provincial government is committed to continuing its work with Ottawa and Grassy Narrows to make the treatment facility a reality.

“We, along with the communitie­s, are pleased with what the federal government is bringing to the table by way of a proposed treatment facility,” he said in a statement.

The community believes the price tag for the centre will be around $4.5 million, but a feasibilit­y study needs to be completed to determine the exact cost, Fobister said. A conceptual plan and design have already been developed.

“Hopefully it will be built ASAP and we are so happy about it,” Fobister said.

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