Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Singh calls on Ottawa to pay Iqaluit water bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Nov, 2021 01:33 PM
  • Singh calls on Ottawa to pay Iqaluit water bill

IQALUIT, Nunavut - Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh wants the Liberal government to pay the cost of fixing Iqaluit's ongoing water emergency.

The 8,000 people who live in Nunavut's capital haven't been able to drink their tap water since Oct. 12 when it was found to contain fuel.

Singh told a news conference in Iqaluit today that territorial and municipal governments estimate it will take $180 million to permanently fix the problem.

Singh says Iqaluit's water infrastructure needs a permanent upgrade to make sure a similar emergency doesn't happen again.

The city has said an underground tank from 1962 is likely to have been the source of the fuel that entered the city's water.

Iqaluit residents have been able to get bottled water at sites around the city or treated water being pumped from a nearby river by members of the Canadian Armed Forces.

While in Iqaluit, Singh and Nunavut NDP member of Parliament Lori Idlout planned to meet with city officials and help hand out water to residents.

"If there was a water crisis of this nature in any other major city in Canada ... what would the federal government do? They would act immediately to fix the problem," Singh said.

The city said the fuel accumulated over time in a raw water tank at its treatment plant and was discovered in a separate tank.

Winnipeg engineers contracted by the city told a council meeting Monday night that the underground site is being cleaned up.

The engineers said water tests have come back clean since Oct. 24, but the Nunavut government still needs to do its own testing before a do-not-consume order is lifted.

Charles Goss, one of the engineers, said the spill could have happened weeks or years ago and residents would have smelled fuel in the water even at very small concentrations.

"There isn't a long history of people drinking contaminated water," he said.

The city has said residents started reporting the smell of fuel in tap water as early as Oct. 2.

City councillors also voted to spend $100,000 on an indoor bypass tank to replace the contaminated one.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

One presumed dead in B.C. construction collapse

One presumed dead in B.C. construction collapse
Fire and rescue personnel determined that one person had sustained "catastrophic" injuries, but it was still too dangerous to remove debris within the construction site in order to recover the body, Sgt. Peter DeVries said in an interview.

One presumed dead in B.C. construction collapse

Imams urge Canadian Muslims to get vaccinated

Imams urge Canadian Muslims to get vaccinated
25 religious leaders have issued a joint statement pointing to "overwhelming, undeniable scientific evidence" of vaccine protection as a fourth wave targets mostly unvaccinated people.    

Imams urge Canadian Muslims to get vaccinated

No plans for mask changes in Alberta, Saskatchewan

No plans for mask changes in Alberta, Saskatchewan
Both Alberta and Saskatchewan say that vaccination is the best, most effective route out of the pandemic and continue to urge residents who have not done so to get the two-jab protection.

No plans for mask changes in Alberta, Saskatchewan

IIO clears Vancouver police officers in shooting

IIO clears Vancouver police officers in shooting
Officers responded to an early morning call from the Salvation Army, where a man who appeared to be drunk was banging on windows and had reportedly been seen carrying a sword, the report said, noting interviews from civilian witnesses and paramedics.

IIO clears Vancouver police officers in shooting

Vancouver Police investigates attack on homeless man

Vancouver Police investigates attack on homeless man
It shows a man in his 20s arguing for several minutes with a group of people, who he appears to know. When a homeless man walked by the group, the suspect swatted him in the head, chased him down the sidewalk, pushed him to the ground, and repeatedly kicked him.

Vancouver Police investigates attack on homeless man

Delta will charge unvaccinated employees $200 per month

Delta will charge unvaccinated employees $200 per month
The airline said Wednesday that it also will stop extending pay protection to unvaccinated workers who contract COVID-19 on Sept. 30, and will require unvaccinated workers to be tested weekly beginning Sept. 12, although Delta will cover the cost. 

Delta will charge unvaccinated employees $200 per month