Truro News

The growing impatience of an industry town

Northern Pulp controvers­y creating tension among family, friends

- BY KEITH DOUCETTE

The picturesqu­e harbour town of Pictou has had an uneasy relationsh­ip with its job-rich, toxin-spewing neighbour almost since it opened in 1967.

Now, the Northern Pulp mill is facing a possibly existentia­l challenge over the massive amounts of effluent it casts off each day.

After years of pumping 70 million litres of treated wastewater a day into lagoons on the edge of the Pictou Landing First Nation reserve, Northern Pulp wants to pipe it into the nearby Northumber­land Strait.

The pulp mill – a key engine of employment in northeaste­rn Nova Scotia and vital to the local forestry sector – says no pipe means no mill.

But some properties in the town are sprinkled with “No Pulp Waste In Our Water” signs, an indication of increasing impatience with Northern Pulp and its spotty environmen­tal record under a succession of owners.

“This has really created tension ... and it’s split some families and friends,” said Karla Macfarlane, a Pictou resident who is the local MLA and interim leader of the provincial Progressiv­e Conservati­ves.

Under provincial legislatio­n, the mill has until 2020 to replace its current wastewater treatment plant in Boat Harbour.

The wastewater lagoons contain nearly 50 years worth of toxic waste. It has been a major concern for the local Mi’kmaq community, which launched a lawsuit in 2010 seeking to eject the treatment plant from its land. The Liberal government promised to clean up the site, which led to legislatio­n passed in 2015.

At the time, Chief Andrea Paul said she was encouraged by the government’s commitment to Pictou Landing and “to the greater community.”

In a recent interview, Paul said she was still optimistic the cleanup of the treatment lagoons – estimated at more than $133 million so far – would proceed as promised.

But Paul said her community shares concerns expressed by fishermen around the Northumber­land Strait region about a potential effluent pipe.

She said residents wonder how a half-century of mill operations might have affected their health and the environmen­t, and there is a lack of trust because of a belief that “the mill has definitely gotten away with a lot of things.”

“Past government­s have allowed it to happen because industry is important in our province,” Paul said. “I would like to see a solution that works for everyone because the last thing I want is for people to be out of work, but we also can’t jeopardize a huge fishing industry either.”

Northern Pulp recently completed the $ 36.9 million replacemen­t project for the stack known as a precipitat­or. It uses static electricit­y to remove solid chemical particles, and critics acknowledg­e the work has led to a significan­t improvemen­t in air quality.

Still, the mill struggled with emissions and was last fall fined $700 by the province after a stack test found the particulat­e matter emitted exceeded limits.

Kathy Cloutier, spokeswoma­n for the mill’s parent company, Paper Excellence, said Northern Pulp has worked to improve its impact on the environmen­t.

“There has been in the span since 2011 to the present time a significan­t commitment and investment by Paper Excellence to reduce the mill’s environmen­tal footprint,” said Cloutier.

She said the company “acknowledg­es the history,” but believes the new treatment plant project represents an opportunit­y.

“We are in a position to be part of ending a legacy that is very negative and start anew with this new system and the continued commitment of Paper Excellence and Northern Pulp,” said Cloutier. “The challenge is ensuring the consistenc­y, and I think we have been working very hard to show the consistenc­y.”

Cloutier said Northern Pulp will continue to engage the community, including fishermen.

In February, groups representi­ng fishermen in Nova Scotia, P.E.I., and New Brunswick suspended further meetings with the mill after voicing frustratio­n over its insistence on a pipe.

“We’ve asked them for Plan B and they said no,” said Ronald Heighton, president of the Northumber­land Fishermen’s Associatio­n.

“We told them our stance hasn’t changed, there’ll be no pipe in the Strait. Their comment at the time was, no pipe, no mill, and so I said I guess we are at an impasse.”

Northern Pulp is to submit an environmen­tal assessment to Nova Scotia’s Environmen­t Department sometime in July.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Northern Pulp says it has worked to improve its impact on the environmen­t.
ANDREW VAUGHN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Northern Pulp says it has worked to improve its impact on the environmen­t.

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