Ecology Ottawa's Ottawa River Action Plan: Campaign background document

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    SUPPORTING THE OTTAWA RIVER ACTION PLAN

    Draft for Comment

    E C O L O G Y O T T A W AStanding up for our river

    e c o l o g y o t t a w a . c a

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    The Ottawa River Action Plan: Campaign Overview

    The Landscape

    Ottawa is defined by its water courses, and especially by the big river that forms its northern border.

    Down at street level, asphalt corridors like the Queensway, Riverside Drive, St. Laurent Boulevard and Walkley Road

    often seem to determine the flow of things . But if we get just a bit above all that concrete and congestion, climb the

    Peace Tower and look down, hike the escarpment in Gatineau Park and look south our eyes and minds, reorient

    themselves. Suddenly, Ottawa becomes what we really are: citizens of one of the great rivers of the world. Unfortu-

    nately, the Ottawa is also a river that very much needs our help.

    OTTAWA RIVER WATERSHED

    From Natural Resources Canada - www.nrcan.gc.ca

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    http://www.nrcan.gc.ca/http://www.nrcan.gc.ca/
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    Why the River Needs Our Support

    Flowing for 1271 kilometres, from Lake Capimitchigama in the Laurentians to the St. Lawrence at Montreal, the Ot-

    tawa is the second largest river in Eastern Canada. Providing precious habitat for endangered species like the Spotted

    Turtle, the Least Bittern and American Ginseng, along with hundreds of other avian, aquatic, and terrestrial species,the Ottawa River is no less precious for the human beings who live near its shores. For thousands of years, people

    have depended on the Ottawa for transportation, food, and recreation. So it is that the Algonquin have long identi-

    fied themselves as the Kichi sipi anishnaabeg or big river people.

    The critical role of the river in nurturing successful habitation along its shores has not lessened with time. But for

    residents of Ottawa who do not live within sight of its waters, it can be easy to forget our dependence on the river.

    When we turn on the tap, it is water from the Ottawa that fills our cups and flows into our homes.

    Every day, the City of Ottawa draws more than 300 million litres of water from the river at the Britannia and Lemieux

    Island water purification plants, thats more than 30 Olympic-sized swimming pools. While its no surprise to hear

    that the water from the Ottawa must be rigorously purified before it arrives at our taps, its worth detailing the spe-

    cific reason that our beautiful rivers water needs this treatment.

    !! Nine pulp and paper mills that process timber along its shores release over 150,000 tonnes of wastewater

    annually (the weight of the cruise ship Queen Mary II). This wastewater contains heavy metals, carcinogens and

    other toxins.

    !! The Chalk River Nuclear Facility releases radioactive waste water.

    !!

    Ottawa homes, businesses, and city streets generate waste water containing household, commercial, andindustrial chemicals, pesticides, and raw sewage. Some of this runs untreated into the municipal water system.

    Not surprisingly, Health Canada advises children and pregnant women against eating most fish species in the Ot-

    tawa River watershed, which includes all streams and rivers that ultimately flow into the Ottawa River.

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    Pulp mill effluent and radioactive waste are problems whose solutions extend beyond the citys jurisdiction. But the

    local waste water system is the City of Ottawas responsibility.

    Fifty years ago, all sewage and other forms of waste water were discharged into the Ottawa River untreated. Today,

    thanks to over $1 billion in upgrades, the situation has improved substantially. But much remains to be done: every

    time it rains even moderately, untreated sewage and storm water still end up flowing into the Ottawa . This is one of

    the most pressing issues facing the health of our river, and, ultimately, all those who rely on the river.

    These discharges of sewage and waste water are known as Combined Sewer Overflow, or CSO, and they pose grave

    risks to the health of our river. These include:

    !! depleting its waters of oxygen (municipal waste water is the main source of oxygen depleting substances),

    !! increasing pollutants like carcinogens and heavy metals that accumulate in the river bed,

    !! choking its tributaries with sediment and debris, and

    !! leaving predator residents like the bald eagle who eat the river fish with lethally high concentrations of

    chemicals in its muscle tissues .

    Untreated waste water also contains a mother lode of bacteria. So the most tangible way that many of us experience

    the effects of Combined Sewer Overflow is the beach closures that frequently follow heavy summer rains, due to high

    counts of fecal bacteria such as E. coli. Such contamination has multiple origins, including human waste and also that

    of the numerous geese in our parks and along our paths, and of our pets throughout the city.

    Combined Sewer Overflow Explained

    While most of Ottawa now enjoys separate pipes for sewage and for storm water, a single-pipe system (designed to

    carry both sewage and storm water) still lies beneath a significant portion of the downtown, a relic from the time

    when there were no waste treatment plants and discharge was direct into the river. Thankfully, the nasty contents of

    these dual-use pipes are now usually routed to the citys water treatment plants.

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    Until, that is, it starts to rain. A rainfall of 2.5 millimetres/hour or more, which is a fairly moderate rate that occurs

    often in Ottawa, means that the volume of liquid suddenly gushing through these combined pipes becomes more

    than the waste water system can handle. In response, the systems overflow valves open and dump untreated mu-

    nicipal waste water " that is, raw sewage and polluted storm water " directly into the Ottawa River.

    In 2011, the City of Ottawa discharged 545 million litres (or 545,000 m3) of combined wastewater/untreated sewage

    from its vintage combined pipes according to the 2012 Regulatory Compliance Report to the City.

    .

    Cleaning Up Our River: The Combined Sewer Overflow Tunnels

    In an ideal world, all of the citys combined sewer / storm water pipes would be separated. Unfortunately, for a 675

    hectare area of the downtown, conversion to a two pipe system in the near future would be both difficult and very

    costly. So single pipes are likely to remain part of Ottawas water system for the foreseeable future.

    Fortunately, technologies exist that could reduce the unfortunate effects of CSO. Chief among these are Combined

    Sewer Overflow Tunnels.

    This approach would see Ottawa build two storage tunnels that would temporarily hold surplus water flows during

    wet weather, thereby preventing the overflows from reaching the Ottawa River. Endorsed by city staff , local envi-

    ronmental activist, a number of community associations and the Ottawa Riverkeeper, a grassroots charity formed to

    protect the health of the Ottawa River, these tunnels would reduce overflows from an annual average of thirty (30)

    per year to one (1) per year, with significant reductions in the number of beach closures; capture greater volumes

    from the more frequent and severe storms predicted to occur as a result of climate change; and, allow for treatment of

    a great volume of urban stormwater" another major pollutant source, according to the official plan.

    So while the problem of CSO is significant, the solution is clear and implementable.

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    http://ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/ec/2012/06-19/05-Document%201%20-%20Regulatory%20Compliance%20Report%5B1%5D.pdfhttp://ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/ec/2012/06-19/05-Document%201%20-%20Regulatory%20Compliance%20Report%5B1%5D.pdfhttp://ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/ec/2012/06-19/05-Document%201%20-%20Regulatory%20Compliance%20Report%5B1%5D.pdfhttp://ottawa.ca/calendar/ottawa/citycouncil/ec/2012/06-19/05-Document%201%20-%20Regulatory%20Compliance%20Report%5B1%5D.pdf
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    NB. Solid areas indicate where the plan is to separate sewers within a 187 hectare area comprising a number of

    streets throughout the core. The stippled area indicates where storage is required to accommodate storm flows gen-

    erated within a 675 hectare area that would continue to use combined water pipes.

    The Situation to date: Making progress, but still short of funding

    Unfortunately, obstacles to installing the CSO tunnels remain. The most important is the federal and provincial gov-

    ernments failure to make good on its pledge to provide its share of financial support for Ottawas sewer system up-

    grade.

    The CSO tunnel project is a critical component of the City of Ottawas Ottawa River Action Plan. Drafted in 2009, this

    Plan (known as ORAP) consists of 17 individual projects designed to restore and protect the health of our river for

    future generations. A series of public consultations contributed to the final articulation of the Ottawa River Action

    Plan, including four open houses in late 2009, a dedicated web page and an online questionnaire.

    In February 2010, the Planning and Environment Committee of the City of Ottawa recommended that city council

    approve the Ottawa River Action Plan at a total projected cost of $251.64 million. Central to successful completion of

    the plan would be a cost-sharing arrangement between three levels of government: municipal, provincial, and fed-

    eral. By the summer of 2011, with good faith being shown by all parties, $100 million had been collectively invested

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    and the first phase of the plan "which focuses on reducing CSO overflow problems" was well underway. (An up-

    date to City Council on the progress of the plan dated September 13, 2011 found all projects [. . .] moving forward

    [with] the majority [. . .] on-schedule.) Further details can be found at

    At time of writing, however, funding arrangements for the critical final third of the project, the Combined Sewer

    Overflow Tunnels, remain uncertain.

    The Federal Perspective: Making Tradeoffs Between Water and Transit

    In a letter dated July 12, 2011, Mayor Jim Watson urged Minister John Baird to follow through on his governments

    earlier pledge for funding to allow Ottawa to fully implement its Ottawa River action plan. Mayor Watson reminded

    Minister Baird that at the time the initial funding arrangement was announced, Minister Baird was explicit about

    how important this file was to [him] personally and to the federal government.

    In his reply to the mayor, Minister Baird noted that in addition to a $33 million federal investment in ORAP that had

    already been delivered, the federal government had also provided the City of Ottawa with $600 million for transit, on

    the understanding that transit was Ottawas top priority.

    Leading up to the spring 2012 federal budget, many individuals and local organizations urged the federal govern-

    ment to fulfil its promise to help fund the Ottawa River Action Plan. Ecology Ottawa helped bring the issue into the

    spot light, both through a letter-writing campaign and a tongue-in-cheek Cut the Crap publicity effort. Unfortu-nately, the 2012 budget did not provide the funding Ottawa needs for ORAP.

    More recently, a spokesman with Minister Bairds office indicated that the federal government would be open to al-

    lowing the City to redirect some of the transit budget to the Ottawa River Action Plan, should the city now be iden-

    tifying that as its priority.

    In media interviews this August, Minister Baird stated his personal support for the CSO project in very clear terms:

    when you think of the environment, one of the most important treasures we have is the Ottawa River and the wholenotion that we'd be dumping what is essentially raw sewage into this historic waterway certainly doesn't sit well

    with me and with most ofthe people in the city. As a result, Minister Baird said that [w]hen we look at the next

    round of federal infrastructure projects (in 2014), support for Ottawa River will be a real priority.

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    The Provincial Perspective: Support, But no Specifics

    Similarly, the provincial government, and Members of Provincial Parliament in the Ottawa area, has also stated its

    commitment to the Ottawa River Action Plan. But with competing infrastructure demands and budgets being cut, the

    provincial government has not provided any clarity about when its share of the funding will be delivered.

    Beyond the CSO tunnels: Phase II, III, and IV of the Ottawa River Action Plan

    Once the funding is secured, the installation of the CSO tunnels would conclude the first phase of the Ottawa River

    Action Plan. Completing this project would make Ottawa a world leader in Combined Sewer Overflow reduction.

    With far fewer beach closures, and a generally healthier aquatic system, this achievement alone would be cause for

    celebration and civic pride. But the effort to restore and protect the health of the Ottawa River and its watershed will

    only have begun.

    The action plan also includes three further phases: the reduction of stormwater impacts, the improvement of waste-

    water treatment, and the development of a long term Water Environment Strategy . Additional information on the

    other phases of the project can be found at the Citys website:

    As a national capital, Ottawa should show itself a world leader in supporting our citys waterways. That starts with

    controlling our combined sewer overflow problems, but it doesnt stop there. Ecology Ottawa recommends additionlong term solutions that could be implemented:

    1. Green Roofs

    Ottawa needs a green roofs bylaw, like the one Toronto has implemented. It would require these roofs to be

    partially or completely covered with vegetation and a growing medium, planted over a waterproof mem-

    brane on all new building development. Green roofs absorb rain water, and have the added bonus of being

    useful for growing food and providing habitat for ecologically and imperative but embattled bees. They

    also create a layer of insulation that keeps the building cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter.

    2. Soaking up Rainfall

    The city should create more permeable surfaces such as roads and sidewalks. These surfaces would absorb

    rainwater instead of letting it stream off into the sewer system. When the citys upgrading a sidewalk or

    road, instead of creating a flat surface thats totally impermeable they could begin to add permeable sur-

    faces. In addition they should be creating green spaces along roadways or sidewalks that hold water.

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    3. Natural Filters

    The creation of wetlands near where the current overflow releases into the river (and there are 18 sites

    where this generally occurs) would allow the water to be filtered and cleaned naturally.

    The City of Ottawa and its citizens must actively promote and assist in the long-term well-being of the river whichunderpins our citys very existence. We will never stop needing the Ottawa river. Now and in the years to come, its

    clear that the river also needs us. Because water is life.

    Taking Action

    Ecology Ottawa is currently spearheading a city-wide petition drive, with the goal of collecting at least 10,000 signa-

    tures by October 2012 . At the time of writing Ecology Ottawa has hit the 6000 mark collected from neighbourhoods

    across the City.

    If you havent signed the petition to keep pressure on our federal representatives and our provincial representatives,

    go to ecologyottawa.ca and click take action. If you would like to be more involved in collecting signatures in your

    neighbourhood, contact Ecology Ottawa at 613-860-5353 or visit the volunteer section on the website.

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    PRESS RELEASE

    Community Associations, Ecology Ottawa ask Ottawa-area MPs to Cut the Crap, Fund the Plan!

    Environmental organization says it is not fair to ask the city to choose between public transit and clean water

    March 7, 2012(Ottawa) At a press conference this morning at Britannia Beach, Ecology Ottawa and CommunityAssociations called on the federal government to help the nations capital clean up its rivers, and asked that it stop call-

    ing on the city to choose between public transit and clean water.

    Were glad the federal government is supportive of making the Ottawa River Action Plan a priority in 2014, but the

    feds are planning to spend billions of dollars on jets, jails and oil subsidies, so we dont think they should be asking the

    people of Ottawa to choose between light rail and clean water, said Graham Saul, chair of Ecology Ottawa. Minister

    Baird has called this a moral issue, so now is the time to act.

    To illustrate the fact that Ottawa dumps hundreds of millions of litres of untreated sewage into the river, a male model

    sat on a toilet bowl in Britannia Beach, with his pants around his knees during the press conference.

    Ecology Ottawa has collected 750 signatures on a letter to all Ottawa-area Members of Parliament (MPs) urging them to

    fight to ensure funding for the Ottawa River Action Plan is included in the federal 2012 budget. During a press confer-ence this morning at Britannia Beach, Saul said he was dissatisfied with the response to the funding request received

    from the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities.

    Pierre Poilievre, M.P. Nepean-Carleton, stated that: The cleanup of the Ottawa River remains the federal government

    priority now and for 2014. We wished the city shared that priority.

    The basic argument from the federal government that if the City is serious about the Ottawa River Action Plan it can

    just use money from federal transit funding is unfair, Saul said.

    Saul was joined at the press conference by representatives from two Community Associations (Riverview Park and

    Westboro Beach) upset with beach closures and untreated sewage in our waterways. These representatives also ex-

    pressed dissatisfaction in the response received from the federal government so far.

    We are asking the federal government to do what is right and fund the Ottawa River Action Plan in Budget 2012, said

    Mari Wellman, chair of the Westboro Beach Community Association.

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