First Nation band says feds quick to respond to toxic discharge in Chilliwack waterway, but not B.C. govt.
CHILLIWACK — For the second time in as many months, a toxic waste discharge has been located in a Chilliwack-area waterway.
According to a news release dated November 29 from Cheam First Nation, the latest discovery follows a toxic waste discharge in September that killed thousands of juvenile salmon on the grounds of a fish habitat restoration project from Cheam and Sqwá First Nations. The band says its ongoing water quality monitoring efforts led to yet another toxic water discharge.
“Through investigation by our staff and land guardians, we discovered a pipe spewing industrial waste into a ditch, dumping it into the fish habitat of Hope Slough,” Cheam First Nation said. “The pipe and waste have been recorded and documented on video. Adult Coho salmon are currently migrating through the slough to their spawning grounds. Evidence of this waste discharge can be seen for several kilometres downstream. This pipe is a permanent fixture which leads us to believe that this is not a one-time offence but an ongoing polluter to these environmentally crucial waterways.”
Cheam said it will cover the cost of the cleanup with RAM Environmental through their own resources as the provincial Ministry of Environment has declined to respond.