Alta. officials don't know if existing disaster plan was followed at Wabamun
Bob Weber
Canadian Press
August 13, 2005
EDMONTON (CP) - The day after Alberta's environment minister was asked to develop a response plan for accidents such as the one that fouled a popular lake, officials acknowledge one already exists but can't say if it was followed.
"There are more than 100 tasks that need to be followed according to this plan," Irwin Huberman, director of communications for Alberta Environment, said Friday. "We don't know whether all tasks within the plan were followed. That will be determined by our very, very honest and frank investigation into our response."
On Thursday, Premier Ralph Klein asked Environment Minister Guy Boutilier to come up with a plan to deal with industrial accidents near bodies of water. The request came after a CN train derailment that sent 70,000 litres of fuel oil - and a small amount of a carcinogenic wood-treating oil - into the waters of Lake Wabamun.
Klein admitted the province deserves any criticism it gets over the way the incident has been handled.
Area residents have been critical of both CN and the province for the timing and extent of their clean-up response, which prompted Klein's order to Boutilier.
However, the government has had a document entitled Dangerous Goods Incident Support Plan in place since 2002. It was signed by Boutilier, who was then the minister of municipal affairs, and is available on the government's own website.
The document details procedures for handling all types of industrial accidents. It prescribes how to rate the accidents and who is responsible for what, depending on the type of accident.
Huberman said different departments are responsible for following different tasks within the plan.
"It will take an investigation . . . to confirm whether all tasks were followed by their departments," he said.
"Clearly, Premier Klein and the minister have indicated the plan did not fully work and we need to do better. For example, did we have enough booms and were they located in places where they could be easily or quickly accessed?"
Huberman said the review will also consider whether additional tasks need to be added to the plan.
"These are all factors that the full experience of going through one of these disasters, this is how you're taught whether the system works or not."
Federal Environment Minister Stephane Dion toured the site on Thursday, saying Ottawa will consider laying charges against CN over the incident.
© The Canadian Press 2005
Bob Weber
Canadian Press
August 13, 2005
EDMONTON (CP) - The day after Alberta's environment minister was asked to develop a response plan for accidents such as the one that fouled a popular lake, officials acknowledge one already exists but can't say if it was followed.
"There are more than 100 tasks that need to be followed according to this plan," Irwin Huberman, director of communications for Alberta Environment, said Friday. "We don't know whether all tasks within the plan were followed. That will be determined by our very, very honest and frank investigation into our response."
On Thursday, Premier Ralph Klein asked Environment Minister Guy Boutilier to come up with a plan to deal with industrial accidents near bodies of water. The request came after a CN train derailment that sent 70,000 litres of fuel oil - and a small amount of a carcinogenic wood-treating oil - into the waters of Lake Wabamun.
Klein admitted the province deserves any criticism it gets over the way the incident has been handled.
Area residents have been critical of both CN and the province for the timing and extent of their clean-up response, which prompted Klein's order to Boutilier.
However, the government has had a document entitled Dangerous Goods Incident Support Plan in place since 2002. It was signed by Boutilier, who was then the minister of municipal affairs, and is available on the government's own website.
The document details procedures for handling all types of industrial accidents. It prescribes how to rate the accidents and who is responsible for what, depending on the type of accident.
Huberman said different departments are responsible for following different tasks within the plan.
"It will take an investigation . . . to confirm whether all tasks were followed by their departments," he said.
"Clearly, Premier Klein and the minister have indicated the plan did not fully work and we need to do better. For example, did we have enough booms and were they located in places where they could be easily or quickly accessed?"
Huberman said the review will also consider whether additional tasks need to be added to the plan.
"These are all factors that the full experience of going through one of these disasters, this is how you're taught whether the system works or not."
Federal Environment Minister Stephane Dion toured the site on Thursday, saying Ottawa will consider laying charges against CN over the incident.
© The Canadian Press 2005
On Aug 3 a CN train derailed and several tanker cars carrying petrochemicals spilled on the shore of a major lake.
The day after Alberta's environment minister was asked to develop a response plan for accidents such as the one that fouled a popular lake, officials acknowledge one already exists but can't say if it was followed.
The railroad reported that the spilled petrochemicals were relatively harmless, other than the oil slick. On Aug 10, they admitted that one of the tankers cars was loaded with a carginogenic petrochemical known as 'imperial pole treatment oil'. The load of 'imperial pole treatment oil' is clearly written on the manifest.
"There are more than 100 tasks that need to be followed according to this plan," Irwin Huberman, director of communications for Alberta Environment, said Friday. "We don't know whether all tasks within the plan were followed. That will be determined by our very, very honest and frank investigation into our response."
There were people wading out into the water to rescue birds stuck in the oil slick. People continued to use their wells until a warning was issued by the health region not to. CN workers were working on the site. The warning was issued 5 days after the train wreck. That was the first mention to anyone about substances toxic to humans.
Huberman said the review will also consider whether additional tasks need to be added to the plan.
"These are all factors that the full experience of going through one of these disasters, this is how you're taught whether the system works or not."
"These are all factors that the full experience of going through one of these disasters, this is how you're taught whether the system works or not."
Train derailments and petrochemicals are new to this guy. I wonder if he is an import from a preindustrial society.
"Clearly, Premier Klein and the minister have indicated the plan did not fully work and we need to do better. For example, did we have enough booms and were they located in places where they could be easily or quickly accessed?"
In a province built on the petrochemical industry, and with a hell of a lot of lakes, CN was left to fend for itself and went to where they knew the materials were, far, far away. The Province was silent, for days...
This doesn't let CN or the Feds off the hook (transport and waterways are both federal jurisdictions). However, the total lack of a clue demonstrated by our provincial government is breathtaking.
The day after Alberta's environment minister was asked to develop a response plan for accidents such as the one that fouled a popular lake, officials acknowledge one already exists
And people wonder why nuclear power might be a bad plan in the wrong hands.
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