Calgary Herald

Companies ordered to pay for maintenanc­e of contaminat­ed site near Grassy Narrows

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA Two forest-product companies are on the hook for looking after a mercury-contaminat­ed site near Ontario’s Grassy Narrows First Nation, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled.

The 4-3 decision Friday brought some clarity to a long-running dispute over one element of the legacy of environmen­tal poisoning that has caused significan­t health problems for many residents.

Eight years ago, the Ontario government ordered Weyerhaeus­er Co. and a firm that later became Resolute Forest Products to care for a mercury waste-disposal site in Dryden, Ont., where toxic material from a pulp-and-paper mill’s operations entered the English-wabigoon river system in the 1960s.

In addition to harming people, the untreated mercury waste from chemical processing led to the closure of a commercial fishery and hurt tourism in the region.

In 1971, the mill owners of the day built the disposal site to contain mercury-laced waste. Six monitoring wells were installed and four others were added later.

The operation’s ownership changed over time as a result of various transactio­ns. In 1998, Weyerhaeus­er entered into an agreement with Bowater to buy some of the pulp-and-paper assets. It wanted to exclude the waste-disposal site due to the possible environmen­tal liabilitie­s.

Severing the site took some time, however. Title was therefore registered in Weyerhaeus­er’s name until August 2000.

Bowater, which eventually became Resolute, filed for bankruptcy protection in 2009. The waste-disposal site was abandoned in April 2011, with court approval, during the bankruptcy proceeding­s.

The 2011 Ontario order obligated Weyerhaeus­er and Bowater to repair disposal site erosion, do water testing, file annual reports, prevent any leaks and give the Ontario Environmen­t Ministry $273,063 as financial assurance with respect

Untreated mercury waste from chemical processing led to closure of a commercial fishery and hurt tourism in the region

to the site.

The two companies claimed that an indemnity granted in 1985 to the owners of the paper facility at the time — part of a settlement with the Grassy Narrows and Islington First Nations — applied to them as well, but the province disagreed.

An Ontario judge ruled in favour of the companies in 2016, saying the language of the indemnity should cover the two subsequent owners.

The Ontario Court of Appeal agreed that the 1985 indemnity applied to the ministry’s environmen­tal order. But it found Resolute was not entitled to indemnific­ation and said the lower court should decide whether it applied to Weyerhaeus­er.

In its decision, the Supreme Court said the 1985 indemnity does not apply to the province’s 2011 order, meaning Resolute and Weyerhaeus­er are liable for the costs of maintainin­g the disposal site.

A majority of the high court concluded the judge who initially heard the case made “palpable and overriding errors of fact.”

The indemnity was meant to cover only proceeding­s arising from the discharge, or continued presence, of mercury in the ecosystem, not those related to mercury in the waste-disposal site, the court said.

The feds have promised money for a facility that would provide specialize­d care to affected Grassy Narrows community members.

 ?? ERIK PINDERA/FILES ?? Grassy Narrows First Nation elder Brenda Kokokopena­ce, centre, suffers from mercury poisoning stemming from a paper mill’s operations in the 1960s.
ERIK PINDERA/FILES Grassy Narrows First Nation elder Brenda Kokokopena­ce, centre, suffers from mercury poisoning stemming from a paper mill’s operations in the 1960s.

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