Times Colonist

$250-million funding for upgrades to graving dock

- CARLA WILSON

The federal government is investing $100 million in it Esquimalt Graving Dock to make the federal facility more inviting to new customers.

The latest injection of funding adds to the $150 million already spent to remediate the seabed and modernize the graving dock.

“In the coming months, tenders for an additional $100 million will be announced for the constructi­on of two new electrical substation­s and a reconstruc­tion of the south jetty,” Public Services Minister Judy Foote said Feb. 27 at CFB Esquimalt. Another tender will be announced to replace the main electrical transmissi­on line connecting the dock to the B.C. Hydro substation in Esquimalt.

The $250 million was allocated in the 2016 federal budget.

The minister said the improvemen­ts ensure that customers using the graving dock can count on reliable service delivered via state-of-the-art technology.

The facility is rented to the Royal Canadian Navy, Canadian Coast Guard, B.C. Ferries and the private sector. When cruise ships pull in for refits and repairs, each contract is worth $10 million to $12 million, said graving dock director Stafford Bingham.

Foote said the graving dock has an estimated economic impact of $200 million annually and supports about 1,300 well-paying jobs. Discussion­s about potential new clients are confidenti­al, but Foote did say that the graving dock is being marketed to potential new companies as a result of its upgrades.

“I can’t overestima­te the importance of remediatin­g the entire water lot from the contaminat­ion accumulate­d from almost 100 years of ship-repair work,” the minister said. That work alone cost $99.5 million of the initial $150-million investment.

A total of 180,000 cubic metres of contaminat­ed material was dredged out the harbour and taken to designated sites in Highlands and in Princeton on the mainland. Materials contained such contaminan­ts as heavy metals and polychlori­nated biphenyls.

The amount of material removed from the harbour would fill up to 70 Olympicsiz­ed swimming pools, according to a Public Works statement.

Andrew Mylly, Public Works’ senior project manager for the waterlot remediatio­n, said in some areas clean sand and rock were placed on the seabed to bolster slopes and protect the seabed. “We constructe­d habitat to compensate for the temporary disruption during the work,” he said.

The final phase in the cleanup was completed three months ago.

Three of the four stages in the cleanup work, totalling $33.7 million, were completed by First Nations businesses.

Modernizat­ion work in the past four years created about 75 jobs, Public Works said.

Foote said: “We are well on our way to ensuring that this facility continues to be a strong engine of growth, creating opportunit­ies for Canada’s middle class and those working hard to join it.”

 ??  ?? Federal Minister of Public Services Judy Foote and Esquimalt Graving Dock visit an electrical distributi­on centre at CFB Esquimalt. director Stafford Bingham
Federal Minister of Public Services Judy Foote and Esquimalt Graving Dock visit an electrical distributi­on centre at CFB Esquimalt. director Stafford Bingham

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