Chemical Valley Archives | Research & Innovation /research/tag/chemical-valley/ Thu, 17 Feb 2011 10:00:00 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Osgoode Professor Dayna Scott on Sarnia's need for local study on pollution /research/2011/02/17/osgoode-professor-dayna-scott-on-sarnias-need-for-local-study-on-pollution-2/ Thu, 17 Feb 2011 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2011/02/17/osgoode-professor-dayna-scott-on-sarnias-need-for-local-study-on-pollution-2/ A forum held last week in our community has further raised the profile of pollution and its impact on our health, and underscores the need for a local study on the issue to commence immediately, wrote The Sarnia Observer Feb. 16 in an editorial: The devastating effects of pollution were discussed at the Community Forum […]

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A forum held last week in our community has further raised the profile of pollution and its impact on our health, and underscores the need for a local study on the issue to commence immediately, wrote :

The devastating effects of pollution were discussed at the Community Forum on Pollution and Action co-organized by Aamjiwnaang First Nation and 91ɫ. , an environmental law professor at 91ɫ[’s Osgoode Hall Law School], told the forum that local residents don't have to accept pollution and its serious health consequences as a fact of life. It's a familiar refrain for many frustrated local residents.

Scott told those in attendance that she is working closely with Aamjiwnaang to investigate the links between pollution and the health impact on residents. The province's pollution laws were discussed in detail at the forum and Scott says the law is broken.

The forum also heard from health researchers Jim Brophy and Margaret Keith who said tonnes of carcinogens are pumped into the air annually by Chemical Valley companies. Keith went so far as to say "industry is polluting and government is turning a blind eye."

It should be noted that Chemical Valley companies have come a long way in recent years to reduce emissions. But there is still an air quality problem in our community.

Residents here deserve to know what impact pollution is having on their health.

The complete article is available on .

Posted by Elizabeth Monier-Williams, research communications officer, with files courtesy of YFile – 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin.

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Upcoming Health and Environment Forum in Sarnia to focus on First Nations youth /research/2011/02/01/upcoming-health-and-environment-forum-in-sarnia-to-focus-on-first-nations-youth-2/ Tue, 01 Feb 2011 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2011/02/01/upcoming-health-and-environment-forum-in-sarnia-to-focus-on-first-nations-youth-2/ Organizers of an upcoming environmental forum are hoping to engage First Nations youth, wrote The Sarnia Observer Jan. 30: The event, hosted by the Aamjiwnaang First Nations Health and Environment Committee, in partnership with 91ɫ, is a follow-up to a 2008 health symposium held in Sarnia to share research findings with members of the […]

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Organizers of an upcoming environmental forum are hoping to engage First Nations youth, wrote :

The event, hosted by the Aamjiwnaang First Nations Health and Environment Committee, in partnership with 91ɫ, is a follow-up to a 2008 health symposium held in Sarnia to share research findings with members of the scientific community, environmental groups, the media and government.

“The idea came about a year ago after [Aamjiwnaang community member] Ada Lockridge mentioned the idea of doing a follow up symposium,” said Sarah Wiebe, project coordinator for the Community Forum on Pollution and Action, and research assistant to , environmental law professor at 91ɫ’s Osgoode Hall Law School [and executive director of the ], who has worked closely with Lockridge and the Aamjiwnaang community to investigate the links between pollution and health.

. . .

The one-day forum will include a series of workshops exploring the relationship between the Aamjiwnaang First Nation and Sarnia's Chemical Valley, to deliver "collective and creative legal education," said Wiebe.

Participants will be invited to familiarize themselves with using the Environmental Registry and accessing PollutionWatch data. A session will also be held exploring how money collected from environmental offences is distributed to affected communities.

"We're trying to look at legal remedies, so when fines are charged to local facilities, one option could be to reallocate that money to those who maybe have a health concern," said Wiebe. "We also want people to have a better understanding of how to provide input when new facilities and projects come up."

Another component of the forum, "Raising Voices," will invite area youth to share their thoughts and concerns on the environment, including a group of First Nations youth who have been working on an ongoing photography assignment since the summer.

"We've asked them to document the good, bad and the ugly in their context; what gives them hope and what gives them concern," said Wiebe. "We're planning to showcase some of their images."

Community members will also receive an update on the ongoing Lambton Community Health Study, as well as updates from researchers investigating cancer, child development and endocrine disruption on the reserve.

Posted by Elizabeth Monier-Williams, research communications officer, with files courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin

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Professor Dayna Nadine Scott: Chemical Valley compromises First Nation people's rights /research/2010/11/09/professor-dayna-nadine-scott-chemical-valley-compromises-first-nation-peoples-rights-2/ Tue, 09 Nov 2010 10:00:00 +0000 /researchdev/2010/11/09/professor-dayna-nadine-scott-chemical-valley-compromises-first-nation-peoples-rights-2/ The cumulative impact of the relentless release of pollutants into the air from Canada’s "Chemical Valley" affects the members of Aamjiwnaang in a way that is fundamentally unfair, and is now argued to be unconstitutional, wrote Dayna Nadine Scott, professor in 91ɫ’s Osgoode Hall Law School and co-director of the National Network on Environments & […]

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The cumulative impact of the relentless release of pollutants into the air from Canada’s "" affects the members of Aamjiwnaang in a way that is fundamentally unfair, and is now argued to be unconstitutional, wrote , professor in 91ɫ’s Osgoode Hall Law School and co-director of the National Network on Environments & Women’s Health in :

The Ontario Ministry of the Environment has known for a long time that its air pollution regulation fails miserably when it is applied to several large, high-emitting facilities clustered together. That regulation allows the Minister to hand out Certificates of Approval (CofAs) or "pollution permits" to individual facilities without taking into account the background, or "ambient," levels of pollution already present. For pollution hotspots like Sarnia, the regime is completely inadequate to protect the health of residents downwind, and the Ministry acknowledges this.

The mantra of the environmental justice movement that “some of us live more downstream than others” is a stark and obvious truth in the Chemical Valley. This area houses one of Canada’s largest concentrations of industry, including several large petrochemical, polymer and chemical industrial plants, as well as coal-fired utilities on both sides of the border. Talfourd Creek gathers its waters in an industrial corridor home to more than 40% of Canada's chemical production before it winds its way through the Aamjiwnaang reserve and empties into the St. Clair River.

. . .

When we consider this pollution and its effects on the health of residents in the context of their status as First Nations people on the reserve, then the violation of their constitutional rights comes into sharp relief.

The First Nation is tied to the land, confined to a small portion of their traditional territory. To this legacy of colonialism, they add the legacy of a century of petrochemical production. That they should be expected to endure these threats to their well-being, perpetuated by the ministry’s failure to enact an effective, health-protective air pollution regime, is unconscionable. That they should be forced to choose between subjecting themselves and their families to these risks or leaving the reserve at great social, economic and cultural cost, demonstrates that their equality rights are clearly infringed.

Posted by Elizabeth Monier-Williams, with files courtesy of YFile– 91ɫ’s daily e-bulletin

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