Vancouver Sun

Chief lauds fresh funding for mercury treatment

New facility to be built on Grassy Narrows

- MAAN ALHMIDI

OTTAWA • New money for a treatment centre for those living with the effects of chronic mercury poisoning comes as a ray of hope for a northern Ontario First Nation that has spent the past six decades in the shadow of a decades-old water contaminat­ion scandal.

“Our community members have suffered for so long,” Grassy Narrows First Nation Chief Randy Fobister said in a recent interview.

“It’s great news for a whole community. We’re finally seeing light at the end of the tunnel.”

Residents of Grassy Narrows First Nation, about 100 kilometres northeast of Kenora, Ont., have grappled with long-standing mental and physical health issues due to toxic mercury levels in the nearby English-W abigoon River. So have many in Wabaseemoo­ng Independen­t Nations, also known as Whitedog First Nation, about 130 kilometres away.

After years of advocacy by the communitie­s, Ottawa reached agreements with both Grassy Narrows and Wabaseemoo­ng earlier this year. The federal government committed up to $19.5 million to each community for the constructi­on of facilities to meet the needs of residents living with methylmerc­ury poisoning.

Now, Ottawa has greatly increased the size of the commitment.

The fall economic statement released last week saw the Liberal government earmark $200 million up to fiscal 2024-25, plus $300,000 ongoing, to support the building and operation of mercury treatment centres in both communitie­s.

The fiscal update said the funding, set to start flowing in fiscal 2021-22, would allow community members from both Wabaseemon­g and Grassy Narrows, also known as Asubpeesch­oseewagong, to stay close to home while receiving treatment.

Hundreds of residents have suffered chronic health problems related to mercury exposure since the 1960s, when a chemical plant at the

Reed Paper mill in Dryden, Ont., dumped 9,000 kilograms of mercury into the river community members rely on for fishing.

“From birth, even today, you get stuff that affects the nerves,” Fobister said. “It affects the youth (with) common signs of symptoms like what you get from mercury poisoning like rashes.”

Last week, Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller described the lack of action on the local mercury contaminat­ion as “an aberration in our history.”

Miller said previous plans for treatment facilities were delayed as Indigenous communitie­s pushed for more comprehens­ive federal funding.

“What we found out quite quickly was that there was no trust between Grassy Narrows and the government of

Canada, and in some senses, rightly so,” he said.

“Part of that trust is putting the money away in a trust (fund) to be used for the community to treat their people, so that they can live in dignity.”

The new plan in the fiscal update would see the feds devote $28 million to the projects in 2021-22, $32 million the following year, and $70 million in each of the next two years.

Opposition critics said they will wait to see it take concrete shape before offering praise.

“The promises are great, but we need to see solutions, we need to see actions, we need to see these problems actually solved,” Conservati­ve MP Gary Vidal, his party’s critic for Indigenous Services, said in an interview.

“We’ v e seen the an - nouncement­s, but we haven’t seen the outcomes,” he said.

Miller said the mercury treatment facilities have potential to fill a unique place in the Canadian health-care system.

“I hope it’ ll become a state-of-the-art place where we can study the effects of mercury poisoning,” he told a news conference last week.

Fobister said his community of about 1,200 residents continues to struggle with tainted water long after the initial mercury contaminat­ion took place.

Grassy Narrows declared

a state of emergency over its unsafe drinking water in 2015, after a boil-water advisory had already been in place for nearly two years, as it tried to get more informatio­n from the federal government about the safety of its water.

Fobister said a water test showed chemical compounds known as trihalomet­hanes ( THMs) that form when the chlorine used to disinfect water reacts with natural organic matter such as vegetation and dead leaves. They also found two other disinfecta­nt byproducts considered possible carcinogen­s.

The water was deemed fit for human consumptio­n again just this October, which Fobister said came after years of work on water treatment facilities and local pipes. But he said community members are still leery of using tap water, relying instead on shipments of bottled water delivered to the community each week.

Two weeks ago, a test found lead in the tap water at the community’s school, Fobister said.

The government promised to fund the building of a new water treatment plant in the community next to the mercury treatment centre. Fobister said ground testing is already taking place in the area where the two facilities should be built.

He said his community will allow constructi­on workers to enter the community despite the fear of COVID-19. He said he hopes to see both projects begin in the spring.

Miller pegged the timeline to finish the buildings at between 18 and 36 months.

Meanwhile, Fobister said he fears his community will bear the consequenc­es of the mercury contaminat­ion until the river is cleaned up, noting such a process could prolong the ordeal for several more generation­s of Grassy Narrows residents.

“When the fish are healthy, the land is healthy, and maybe, maybe then the youth, 50 years from now, they’ll have good health.”

OUR COMMUNITY MEMBERS HAVE SUFFERED FOR SO LONG.

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Water bottles are seen at the water supply site on the Grassy Narrows First Nation in northweste­rn Ontario, which is planning to build a water treatment plant after six decades of suffering the effects of mercury contaminat­ion.
PAUL CHIASSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS Water bottles are seen at the water supply site on the Grassy Narrows First Nation in northweste­rn Ontario, which is planning to build a water treatment plant after six decades of suffering the effects of mercury contaminat­ion.

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