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Having built a
$38-million sewer pipe that
doesn’t work, regional
government proposes to spend $17
million more to fix the problem. It’s time to get some outside expert
advice. A few years ago,
regional officials were talking about the South Ottawa
Collector as one of the engineering marvels of our time, a
seven-kilometer sewer big enough to drive trucks through that
was mined under under the Greenbelt using five mine shafts. A
Montreal company was brought in to bore the tunnel with huge
drills guided by laser beam, similar to the way the Chunnel
was built between England and France. Soon workers will be
mining once again, this time for up to 2,000 tonnes of
solidified waste that went into the sewer and stayed there.
This sewer is massive, four times the size needed, and it’s
not a regular gravity-fed sewer. Instead, it’s a siphon sewer
that relies on pressure created by large volumes of sewage.
Some
crucial decision-makers made a major mathematics mistake and
did not ensure that there was any fall-back technology, such
as pumps, in case the flow was
insufficient. |
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The public-safety threat is
significant because of methane gas build-up from the decaying
waste. Simply flushing the pipe won’t work because such a huge
slug of waste might damage our $345-million sewage treatment
plant. To top it all off, a leak in the sewer was discovered
last month. The sewer can only be used during heavy
rainstorms. This is a boondoggle
extraordinaire. There is already talk at regional
headquarters of lawsuits and that is understandable. It may
not, however, be the wisest course of action, at least not
until a thorough outside investigation is
complete. Elected
councilors would be foolish to simply let the regional
engineers and planners who oversaw this project, and their
legal and accounting colleagues, take it from
here. If it turns out that regional
staff, instead of outside engineering firms, made significant
errors, what are the chances that regional staff are going to
highlight that or go after it, even if it’s dished up
by an outside firm? With the greatest respect to hard-working |
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regional-government
employees, it seems highly unlikely that they will dump dirt on themselves
or decide that their past work was defective. Councillors
should instead establish an independent review of the entire
project, with a lead consulting firm employing whatever
lawyers, accountants and engineers they need to find exactly
what happened and advise council about its options. Getting
the facts, free of a biased information-gathering process, is
essential before the region starts suing some of its biggest
contractors. This task force could report directly to a
steering committee of regional councilors, the people who must
ultimately be publicly accountable for the misspending of
public money. This kind of process has worked well recently
in the examination of the public transit system in
Ottawa-Carleton. The consultants’ arm’s-length reporting and
analysis on the bus company has been impressive in its breadth
and detail, meaty enough to justify changing staff and fixing
specific problems. The sewer fiasco demands
equal attention, though regional staff are bound to fight such
a move. The credibility of regional government is at
stake.
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