July 15, 2016 - An Open Letter to Minister Catherine McKenna re: Her Letter to OPG Requesting Further Information on the DGR and OPG's Inadequate Response

July 15, 2016
The Honourable Catherine McKenna,
Minister of Environment and Climate Change,
Environment Canada,
Minister’s Office
200 Sacre-Coeur Blvd., 2nd Floor,
Gatineau, QC, K1A 0H3

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE MINISTER RE 1) HER FEBRUARY 18, 2016 LETTER TO OPG REQUESTING FURTHER INFORMATION RE THE PROPOSED KINCARDINE DGR, AND 2) OPG’S RESPONSE OF APRIL 15, 2016 SENT TO RON HALLMAN, PRESIDENT OF THE CANADIAN ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT AGENCY (CEAA), DODGING 2 OF THE MINISTER’S 3 QUESTIONS

Dear Minister:

Please note our new name, SOS GREAT LAKES. This reflects the rapidly growing concern about a Kincardine DGR shared by Canadians and Americans, especially the 40 million people who receive their drinking water from the Great Lakes. SOS began as a local citizens’ group, Save Our Saugeen Shores, dedicated to keeping buried nuclear waste out of the Great Lakes Basin. From 2012 to 2014, we fought to stop the proposed DGR for high level nuclear waste in Saugeen Shores, a few kilometres north of Kincardine. That battle was won. Now, as explained at http://www.sosgreatlakes.org, we are working to bring to your attention the voices of thousands of Canadians and Americans throughout the Great Lakes Basin and beyond who are appalled at the notion of nuclear waste being buried so close to the world’s largest supply of fresh drinking water.

We urge you to instruct Mr. Hallman to reject OPG’s April 15 letter as completely inadequate. You made specific requests relating to:

a) “alternate locations…”, - that is, specific locations when you noted “...with specificreference to actual locations...”, and;

b) “…cumulative environmental effects of the Project in light of the results of the Phase 1 of the Preliminary Assessments undertaken by the Nuclear Waste Management Organization, which identified three potential host communities that fall within the traditional territory of the Saugeen Ojibway Nation.”

You and Mr. Hallman received answers to neither.

Instead of following your instructions regarding “alternate locations”, OPG misinterprets by stating OPG will look at “geologic regions”, - granite in the north and sedimentary rock in the south. This replicates OPG’s performance before the Joint Review Panel (JRP) when it routinely promised to answer the JRP’s questions but always seemed to manage to duck or dodge.

OPG should be instructed to follow the directions given.

Similarly, with respect to your question about “cumulative effects”, instead of following yourinstructions, OPG stated it will look at the cumulative effects of a hypothetical used fuel repository on its Project in two of the three communities. It not only arbitrarily reduced the number of communities from three to two but twists the requests from ‘cumulative environmental effects of two repositories on the communities’ to the ‘effect of a DGR2 on its DGR1’.

Again, OPG should be instructed to follow the directions given.

With respect to the scope of your February 18 letter, we would respectfully point out you could have requested more information, consistent with the Act’s requirements, about alternative means of storage in addition to alternative locations. OPG’s material and the JRP report are both as deficient in their analysis of alternate means as they were about alternate locations.

In November 2015 we sent you a detailed Briefing Document on 8 major public policy errors that we believe are present in this OPG proposal for a Kincardine Nuclear Waste Repository and the JRP Report approving it. Your February 18 letter seeks more information on a major part, but not all, of 1 of those 8 errors. The remaining 7 may have been acceptable to the Harper Government. However, all 7 of these errors appear to be inconsistent with your Government’s election platform and post-election policy statements. This leads us to believe that in the unlikely event that OPG is able to satisfy you on the February 18 questions, you would have multiple other reasons to reject the JRP Report.

To date, you have declined our request for a meeting, presumably on the advice of counsel, because we have applied for Judicial Review of the JRP decision by the Federal Court and Environment Canada is a respondent. We respect that advice, but want you to know we have confidence that, after thorough review of our information, your Government will share our view that the issues we raised in the detailed Briefing Document call for a Public Policy decision rejecting this OPG proposal.

Respectfully,

Jill Taylor, President
SOS Great Lakes
On behalf of the Board of Directors

 

With copies to:
The Right Honourable Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada
The Honourable Kathleen Wynne, Premier of Ontario
The Honourable James Carr, Minister of Natural Resources
The Honourable Stephane Dion, Minister of Foreign Affairs
The Honourable Kirsty Duncan, Minister of Science
The Honourable Ralph Goodale, Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
The Honourable Dominic LeBlanc, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard
The Honourable Jane Philpott, Minister of Health
The Honourable Glenn Thibeault, Minister of Energy
The Honourable Eric Hoskins, Minister of Health and Long Term Care
The Honourable David Orazietti, Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services
The Honourable Glen R. Murray, Minister of the Environment and Climate Change
The Honourable Kathryn McGarry, Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry
Marlo Raynolds, Chief of Staff, Environment and Climate Change Canada
Ron Hallman, President, Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency

Click here for the PDF version of this letter

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June 21, 2016 - It’s time to speak up. Let your voice be heard.

SOS Great Lakes

It’s time to speak up. Let your voice be heard.
Follow us on twitter, like and share our Facebook page with your friends!

In April, Canada’s Minister of Environment & Climate Change, received a schedule from Ontario Power Generation indicating that they will submit the information on their proposed nuclear waste deep geologic repository by the end of this year. If we are to successfully oppose OPG’s plan to build a nuclear waste dump on the shore of Lake Huron, we have to move quickly.

 

The good news is, we are prepared.

If you are willing to lend us your voice and help us share our information, we believe we can prevent this threat from becoming a reality. We are writing now to bring you up to date on our strategy and to show you how you can make your voice heard in this important discussion.

 

We changed our name.

Formerly known as SOS Save Our Saugeen Shores, we are now known as SOS Great Lakes. Our original name served us well when we were fighting the idea of a high level nuclear waste dump in Saugeen Shores. The issue now is the threat to drinking water for 40 million people posed by OPG’s planned nuclear waste dump near Kincardine, on the shore of Lake Huron. We changed our name to bring this threat to the attention of the millions of people who rely on the Great Lakes for fresh water through a coordinated campaign. 

 

We launched a new website. 

Our plans are on our new website, sosgreatlakes.org. You will be receiving updates and information going forward. We will launch a video, we will start a web-based fund-raising campaign and we will intensify our efforts with the governments of Ontario, Canada, the United States, Great Lakes states, and all municipalities in the Great Lakes basin on both sides of the border.  Please make sure you receive this information by putting our new name and email address in your address book:

SOS Great Lakes - info@sosgreatlakes.org

 

Let your voice be heard.

By taking a few simple steps, you can help to ensure our success.  Most important, we would like you to share our news.  To be successful we have to alert the millions of people who rely on the Great Lakes, that their drinking water is at risk.  That’s a tall order, but if you tell your friends, and they tell their friends and so on, we can do it. We will give you the tools to help you communicate this message.
 
Please let our voices be heard by sharing the information we give you, with your own network.
 
Your voice is more powerful than you think.

Please help us tell this important story by passing along this information to your friends and networks.  When I hit the send button on my email, I reach out to you, the 2,000 members who are committed to helping us achieve our goals.
 
When you share our information with your friends and networks, you reach out to 200,000 people who know you and trust you.  If they share our messages with their networks, some 20 million people will become aware of this issue. At that point, politicians on both sides of the border will be forced to listen to our concerns.
 
We can do this. You can do this. Please help us save the Great Lakes from nuclear waste.
 
Your lakes.  Your choice.

Sincerely,

Jill Taylor
President, SOS Great Lakes

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APRIL 15, 2016 - OPG RESPONSE TO MINISTER MCKENNA

"This letter is to inform the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA) of Ontario Power Generation's (OPG's) response plan and when OPG will be submitting the information requested in a recent letter from the Minister of the Environment and Climate Change [Reference 1]Further, this letter seeks confirmation that OPG's response plan will meet the objectives set out in the Minister's request. "

http://www.ceaa-acee.gc.ca/050/documents/p17520/113813E.pdf

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FEBRUARY 18, 2016 - MINISTER MCKENNA REQUESTS ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FROM OPG,

Public Notice
Deep Geologic Repository Project — Ministerial Request for Additional Information

http://www.ceaa-acee.gc.ca/050/document-eng.cfm?document=104963

February 18, 2016 — The Minister of Environment and Climate Change, the Honourable Catherine McKenna, today requested additional information and further studies on the environmental assessment for the proposed Deep Geologic Repository (DGR) Project for Low and Intermediate Level Radioactive Wastein Kincardine, Ontario.

After considering the Joint Review Panel Environmental Assessment Report, the Minister has requestedthat the proponent, Ontario Power Generation, provide additional information on three aspects of the environmental assessment: alternate locations for the project, cumulative environmental effects of the project, and an updated list of mitigation commitments for each identified adverse effect under the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, 2012 (CEAA 2012).

Ontario Power Generation has been asked to provide the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, by April 18, 2016, with a schedule for fulfilling the information request. The Minister will contact the Panel, at a future date, regarding its role in the review of the additional information and studies.

The Minister's request for information from the proponent has paused the timeline for an environmental assessment decision to be issued, as per section 54(6) of CEAA 2012. At a later date, the Minister will seek a further timeline extension from the Governor in Council.

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