‘We don’t want your garbage’: Northern township in shock after hearing Ontario is sending it radioactive waste

Communities asking the province to halt its transport plan while it holds consultations
Aya Dufour · CBC News Aug 20, 2024
Residents of a small northern Ontario township 40 minutes west of Sudbury say they were blindsided by Ontario’s decision to transport radioactive waste from an abandoned mill 200 kilometres away to the tailing facilities in their community in the coming weeks.
Nairn and Hyman, with a total of about 300 residents, became aware of the province’s plan when work began on the back roads leading to the Agnew Lake Mine last month, after there hadn’t been much action on that property since the Ministry of Mines took over in the 1990s.
“This project has been in the works for years. Why are we only finding out about it now?” asked Nairn chief administrative officer Belinda Ketchabaw said during an emergency joint council meeting Monday.
The province’s plan involves using the tailings on the property to store 40 tonnes of naturally occurring radioactive materials from the abandoned niobium ore processing mill near Nipissing First Nation.
The mill operated for barely a few months before shutting down in the 1950s and its tailings contaminated soil in the First Nation in the decades that followed.
Remediation work there has been a long time coming, with the process of identifying and excavating the contaminated soil beginning in 2019.
The Ministry of Transportation (MTO) and the Ministry of Mines are now moving on to the next step, which involves hauling the radioactive materials elsewhere.
The tailings facility in Nairn was chosen as it is already designed to receive radioactive materials. It’s been holding radioactive waste and byproducts of the inactive Agnew Lake Mine for decades without incident. The tailings themselves are some 20 kilometers away from the centre of the township.
Townships ask province to halt transport, consult with them……………………..
…………………….A town hall is set to take place in Nairn and Hyman in the coming weeks. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/sudbury/nairn-hyman-nipissing-first-nation-remediation-ontario-1.7299108 ]
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