Saanich News

Decision nears for Greater Victoria's sewage sites

Email Print Letter to Editor Share
Text  

The reports have been filed, the public has spoken. Now, with all the information in hand, there's nothing left to do but pick a site.

After last week's final public meeting on potential treatment plant sites in east Saanich and north Oak Bay, the politicians planning the Capital Regional District's core-area sewage system have all the information they will receive before they make their choice this fall.

The input has included community meetings as well as reports from consultants outlining the environmental, social and financial pros and cons of three candidate sites -- a CRD owned parcel of land in the Haro Woods and two on the University of Victoria campus.

But how will CRD directors weigh the different kinds of information they've received in making their decision?

Esquimalt mayor Barbara Desjardins spoke forcefully against following a consultant’s report that scored the Haro Woods site above the over two, due its lower financial costs, though it ranked last environmentally.

"There's not much that we're doing in terms of evaluating things that is ever going to show the environment come out on top. And Haro Woods is a very special environment," said Desjardins.

"We should, in my opinion, have never purchased the property and we should be very careful in assessing it as a treatment site," adding the process should have chosen treatment technologies before settling on sites.

Victoria Coun. Charlayne Thornton-Joe also suggested financial concerns are in danger of trumpting environmental ones.

"Perhaps we should be having more discussions with the university and seeing whether there are partnerships there," she wrote in an e-mail. "As they excel in issues of climate change and sustainability, I believe this is something that they should be embracing as well."

Oak Bay Coun. John Herbert said, as a retired accountant, financial matters tend to be at the front of his mind, but he won't make a decision before the vote approaches.

"I'm not going to spend the whole summer stewing about it. I've made lots of notes and I'll try to read what the people said (at the final public meeting) and then we'll make a decision."

Committee chair Judy Brownoff stressed that choosing a preferred option will not be the end of the process. Any site chosen will go for a detailed environmental review, or the committee may vote to receive environmental reports on more than one before moving ahead.

"If the committee decides to pick one site, and say it's Haro Woods, ... we have to do an environmental assessment," she said. "I need to know what's in the woods. I need to know if 10 trees come down, will hundreds of trees fall (in a storm)?"

kvass@vicnews.com

v2

COMMENTS

COMMENTING ETIQUETTE: To encourage open exchange of ideas in the BCLocalNews.com community, we ask that you follow our guidelines and respect standards. Don't say anything you wouldn't want your mother to read. More on etiquette...

Recent Comments on Saanich News

Most Read Stories

Most read in your Region

Most read across BC