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- Newsgroups: sci.environment
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!destroyer!cs.ubc.ca!news.UVic.CA!sol.UVic.CA!klassen
- From: klassen@sol.UVic.CA (Melvin Klassen)
- Subject: Chill out, and swim the waters near Victoria, B.C.
- Message-ID: <1992Dec19.233811.14685@sol.UVic.CA>
- Sender: news@sol.UVic.CA
- Nntp-Posting-Host: sol.uvic.ca
- Organization: University of Victoria, Victoria, B.C. CANADA
- Date: Sat, 19 Dec 92 23:38:11 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- On Wednesday, December 16, 1992, the Capital Regional District chairman,
- Frank Leonard (telephone: 1-604-360-3000) said:
-
- I invite any Washington-state mayor put down the _National Enquirer_
- style editorial or cartoon they may be reading, and join me for a swim
- at any time at any one of our beaches, because they are all clean.
- In fact, if a Washington-state mayor wants to take up my invitation,
- we can start with a polar-bear swim at Ross Bay, which is right next
- to the outfall, and is now safe for swimming.
-
- Greater Victoria has been under fire from federal, provincial and Washington-
- state officials since residents turned down sewage treatment in a non-binding
- referendum on November 21. Currently, raw, screened, sewage is pumped through
- deep ocean outfalls in Juan de Fuca Strait.
-
- Leonard said Victoria's sewage debate has to be put into context.
- He quoted an article by scientist Peter Chapman, whose $250,000 study
- of the sediments around the two sewage outfalls concluded the environmental
- effect is minimal, not of consequence beyond the immediate discharge area,
- and "certainly not of environmental concern to Washington state".
- Leonard said "I am afraid that not many of our political counterparts
- or government officials stateside will even consider our scientific evidence,
- because they have invested billions of dollars in their programs,
- and cannot afford to admit they may have been wrong, that there may be
- circumstances where secondary treatment is not required".
-
- He questioned how much of Washington's coastline is safe for swimming.
-
- "Could it be as bad as Hawaii, where beaches were closed 106 times
- last year, attributed to sewage? Let's see if a polar-bear swim
- can chill down the hype."
-
-