Ontario government commits to fund health study after 'Chemical Valley’ investigation

16/10/17
Author: 
Carolyn Jarvis & Andrew Russell

#11 of 11 articles from the Special Report:The Price of Oil

The Ontario government says it is committed to funding a health study to determine the impact of air pollution on residents living near Sarnia’s Chemical Valley following a Global News investigation that revealed a troubling pattern of potentially dangerous leaks there.

Ontario Progressive Conservative leader Patrick Brown said the study is estimated to cost about $1.7 million,

The announcement comes after joint investigation by Global News, the Toronto StarNational Observer, The Michener Awards Foundation and journalism schools at Ryerson and Concordia analyzed more than 500 government reports, obtained through Access to Information requests. They documented a troubling frequency of industrial spills and leaks in Sarnia’s Chemical Valley over a two-year period which raises serious concerns about government oversight of industry and how the city’s alert system has been used just once to notify residents about spills since 2014.

The investigation found that a nearly 10-year effort to get a local health study to examine the impacts of the petrochemical industry on Sarnia and Aamjiwnaang was scuttled, despite research and statements from local residents who feared for their health.

Sarnia, Global News, chemical plant, The Price of Oil, Carolyn Jarvis
According to data compiled by this investigation, there are 57 polluters registered with the Canadian and U.S. governments that lie within 25 kilometres of Sarnia, Ont. Photo by Global News

“There’s more work to do to ensure we balance the needs of the economy and the environment, but these two are not mutually exclusive,” Ballard said.

Brown slammed the Liberal government’s handling of health concerns from residents of Sarnia and Aamjiwnaang First Nation and called for an inquiry.

“We are sickened by the stunning indifference by the government,” Brown told reporters. “When you have serious concerns being raised and reports going back a decade and the only government response is ‘open to looking at it,’ it’s clear there’s something terribly wrong.”

“Hearing the stories of people affected on the Global expose, I think anyone that watched that, it was moving,” Brown said. “There’s an understanding that finally, finally we have to see some action.”

Opposition parties also hammered the Liberals during question period Monday. NDP Leader Andrea Horwath called the investigation "shocking" and asked why residents weren't warned about about the dangerous leak of chemicals including benzene, which causes cancer at high levels of long-term exposure.

"There were over 500 separate incidents... including one leak in 2014 that saw an unsafe level of benzene released into the atmosphere," Horwath said. "The toxic plume reached nearby residential neighbourhoods but families were never told what the odour was or if it was dangerous."

Ballard said he recognizes there’s "more to be done" when it comes to regulating industry.

“We are building on previous regulations to lower air pollution and we are committed to funding a health study of local Sarnia residents,” Ballard said during Question Period. “We will be announcing stricter regulations in the coming weeks.”

Ontario’s Environmental Commissioner, Dianne Saxe, said it’s “truly shameful” what is happening to residents living in Sarnia and Aamjiwnaang First Nation.

“It’s clear to me that this situation is outrageous and it needs immediate attention,” Saxe said. “First Nations communities disproportionately bear the burden of pollution across Ontario and that needs to change."