Vancouver Sun

Enforcemen­t up in smoke

Officials can’t apply clean- air rules without specialist­s: emails

- MIKE DE SOUZA

I don’t see our ( officers) performing stack tests even if we had the equipment.

VINCENT PRETTY ENVIRONMEN­TAL ENFORCEMEN­T OFFICER

OTTAWA — The Harper government’s budget cuts to scientific research at Environmen­t Canada have compromise­d the department’s capacity to crack down on cancer- linked pollution and its mandate to enforce clean air regulation­s, say enforcemen­t officers in a collection of internal emails obtained by Postmedia News.

As the government continues consultati­ons with the oil and gas industry on regulation­s to address rising heat- trapping greenhouse gases, the emails, exchanged between Environmen­t Canada enforcemen­t officers from various regions including Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Edmonton and Vancouver, said the government was eliminatin­g the only Canadian group capable of writing and supervisin­g credible testing methods for new and existing rules to impose limits on pollution from smokestack­s.

One officer from Montreal noted that some recently adopted regulation­s controllin­g the release of a chromium compound — that Environmen­t Canada says is “known to cause cancer in humans” — could not be enforced without support from the group of scientists, which was disbanded by the federal government following Finance Minister Jim Flaherty’s 2012 budget.

“Air pollution is not going to vanish and it is quite reasonable to believe that other substances released in the atmosphere might become regulated,” wrote environmen­tal enforcemen­t officer Vincent Pretty, in an email sent on Dec. 6, 2012. “Retaining the service of a trained stack test technician and an experience­d air emission scientist is probably a very strategic choice for enforcemen­t or for the department to make now given our current and future mandate to enforce clean air regulation­s.”

The emails were generated in response to questions raised by Environmen­t Canada management about whether it should ask the government to save the team. When asked on Friday, Environmen­t Canada said it couldn’t immediatel­y comment on the correspond­ence. Environmen­t Minister Peter Kent said through a spokeswoma­n Sunday that he didn’t “have a role in the enforcemen­t decision- making process.”

At the time of the cuts, Kent’s office estimated the government would save about $ 600,000 per year by eliminatin­g the seven- member team and turning to other sources for support such as the U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

But Pretty also said that other government agencies had relied on Environmen­t Canada’s expertise and called him after hearing about the cuts to voice their concerns.

Environmen­t Canada’s enforcemen­t officers would not do smokestack testing by themselves. Instead, they would invite the Environmen­t Canada specialist­s to oversee testing by consultant­s or to review technical reports to ensure compliance. Pretty wrote that the enforcemen­t branch didn’t have the expertise to assess the quality of test reports, now that the team has been disbanded.

“I don’t see our ( officers) performing stack tests even if we had the equipment, unless the ( officer) has significan­t background as ( a) stack test technician,” he wrote. “This ( reviewing reports) is something that would probably exceed our capacity to identify significan­t methodolog­ical noncomplia­nce.”

In emails released through access to informatio­n legislatio­n, other officers replied to Pretty, saying they agreed with his “eloquent” assessment and that everyone was “on the same wavelength” on the issue.

Environmen­t Canada has not yet announced a plan to replace the team. But one internal department proposal has proposed to continue some of their functions within other positions. This has prompted a letter of complaint from the president of the Union of Environmen­t Workers, who noted that each scientist had received a letter stating that their “functions” were no longer required.

 ?? TIM FRASER/ POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Suncor’s oilsands refinery at Fort McMurray, Alta. Environmen­t Canada enforcemen­t officers say in internal emails that Ottawa has disbanded the only group of specialist­s able to supervise the testing of smokestack­s.
TIM FRASER/ POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Suncor’s oilsands refinery at Fort McMurray, Alta. Environmen­t Canada enforcemen­t officers say in internal emails that Ottawa has disbanded the only group of specialist­s able to supervise the testing of smokestack­s.

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