Toronto Star

Investigat­ions, prosecutio­ns for polluting in Canada down sharply

- MIA RABSON

Environmen­t Canada has been doing fewer inspection­s, investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns over the last five years to enforce a law protecting people from toxic chemicals and air pollution.

According to figures provided last month in response to a written question submitted in the House of Commons, the department investigat­ed 43 companies for violations of the Canadian Environmen­tal Protection Act in 2015-16. There were 22 prosecutio­ns and conviction­s.

In each of the last two fiscal years, however, the department investigat­ed 12 companies.

One was prosecuted and convicted.

“It definitely raises a lot of questions and concerns,” said NDP MP Laurel Collins, the critic for environmen­t and climate change who posed the question.

“It’s wild that there was only one investigat­ion that led to a prosecutio­n in 2018 and 2019,” she said. “I think most Canadians would be surprised to hear that. I don’t think anyone thinks there is only one company violating.”

The Canadian Environmen­tal Protection Act (CEPA) governs how Canada manages toxic chemicals and air pollution.

In February, Collins submitted the order paper question, which is what MPs use when they want a more detailed answer from the government than is usually possible during the daily oral question period in the House of Commons.

She was seeking an update to a 2018 report on CEPA enforcemen­t from the federal environmen­t commission­er.

That report called out Environmen­t Canada for disproport­ionately focusing on dry cleaners and the fluid they use for cleaning — known as perchloroe­thylene — even though it was not more toxic than other substances investigat­ors were supposed to be monitoring.

Collins says she was dishearten­ed to find that enforcemen­t has fallen “dramatical­ly.”

Asked to explain the drop in investigat­ions under the act, a spokespers­on for Environmen­t Canada said only that investigat­ions can be complex and take many years to complete.

Environmen­t Minister Jonathan Wilkinson would not comment because enforcemen­t is an arm’s-length process that must remain outside the political realm, according to spokespers­on Moira Kelly.

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