The Hamilton Spectator

Province waits on sewer-camera search option

Environmen­t minister in city Thursday for an Ontario Parks-Collective Arts beer launch

- KATE MCCULLOUGH KATE MCCULLOUGH IS AN EDUCATION REPORTER AT THE SPECTATOR. KMCCULLOUG­H@THESPEC.COM

Ontario’s environmen­t minister says it’s “too early” to say whether the province intends to force the city to conduct a multimilli­on-dollar sewer camera search for spills.

A report submitted to the Ministry of Environmen­t, Conservati­on and Parks last week found it would cost the city up to $50 million to send cameras through the Hamilton’s entire sewer system.

The ministry-ordered audit was prompted by a pair of sewage spills that went undetected for 26 years, the first leaking an estimated 337 million litres of sewage into the harbour.

“Our focus is on the environmen­t,” Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Environmen­t Minister David Piccini said at a news conference Thursday.

This includes ensuring spills are “reported in a timely manner” and that “aging infrastruc­ture” is replaced as needed.

“We have the relationsh­ip, we have the commitment to rectify this, and we’re working very closely to do that,” he said.

The city has proposed targeted, “risk-based” inspection­s in lieu of the pricier, systemwide search.

Mayor Andrea Horwath said the city has been working with the province to address issues with its “very old” system.

“We’ve come up with a proactive way of taking a look based on risk ... to identify any potential problems before we have an incident,” she said.

Piccini was in Hamilton on Thursday to announce a partnershi­p with local brewery Collective Arts and launch a limited-edition craft beer, Trail Loop.

Proceeds from the new honey lager — 30 cents from each can sold and 50 per cent of merchandis­e sales — will be donated to a reforestat­ion project at Balsam Lake Provincial Park in the Kawarthas, an ecosystem “in decline” as a result of invasive species like the emerald ash borer.

The Ontario Parks-Collective Arts collaborat­ion aims to fund the removal of invasive species and planting of more than 1,000 native trees, including sugar maple, paper birch, white cedar and red oak.

In 2022, the partnershi­p raised nearly $6,000 for the project.

Meanwhile, the province has been taking heat from residents and politician­s about its controvers­ial decision to remove 7,400 acres land from the Greenbelt, including about 1,900 in rural Hamilton, for fast-tracked homebuildi­ng.

Several people protested Greenbelt developmen­t outside the brewery Thursday morning.

 ?? ?? Ontario Minister of Environmen­t David Piccini
Ontario Minister of Environmen­t David Piccini

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