Edmonton Journal

Railways must tell municipali­ties about dangerous goods

- Mike De Souza

OTTAWA — Transport Minister Lisa Raitt is ordering railway companies to share informatio­n with municipali­ties about dangerous goods going through their neighbourh­oods.

Flanked by representa­tives from the Federation of Canadian Municipali­ties, Raitt said her new order would require Class 1 railway companies — the largest railways in the country — to provide yearly informatio­n, divided by quarter, on the nature and volume of any dangerous goods transporte­d by rail.

It would also require the companies to notify municipali­ties, as soon as possible, about any significan­t changes to the informatio­n.

The smaller railways would also be required to provide annual informatio­n and important updates, without necessaril­y providing quarterly breakdowns.

The new order follows through on key concerns raised by cities in the wake of last summer’s Lac-Mégantic runaway train disaster that killed dozens of people in the small Quebec town in a fiery explosion that destroyed buildings and spilled millions of litres of oil into the environmen­t.

Raitt, who took over the transport portfolio in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s cabinet in July following the Lac-Mégantic tragedy, said the measures would help first responders deal with emergency situations.

“Rail companies do provide informatio­n to municipali­ties but it’s not grounded in regulation and there’s no penalties should the provision of informatio­n not happen,” Raitt said. “That was the big ask that the municipali­ties had. I was in Lac-Mégantic very soon after I became minister and I met with the mayors as well about a week later and that was what they wanted.”

She said the government is still working on other issues related to the prevention of serious accidents, including long-standing safety concerns about the tanker cars, involved in the Quebec disaster.

“The tank car issue is being discussed between ourselves and the United States because it’s a North American issue, for several years … we’re working hard on it,” Raitt said.

The Railway Industry Associatio­n of Canada, an industry lobby group, said it supported the new measures, while noting that part of the problem in the past was related to confusion within cities and their fire department­s or emergency services.

“I think in some cases, elected officials didn’t have the informatio­n and didn’t realize that their fire chief had the informatio­n,” said Michael Bourque, president and CEO of the industry associatio­n.

 ??  ?? Lisa Raitt
Lisa Raitt

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