The federal government plans to break up a team of Environment Canada smokestack specialists that played a key role working with enforcement officers and industry to crack down on toxic pollution, a Postmedia News investigation has revealed.
Details of the cuts emerged through a series of leaked documents and interviews that revealed members of the Ottawa-based group of scientists were told their current roles would be eliminated over the next year.
Environment Minister Peter Kent declined an interview request from Postmedia News on Friday about cuts in his department, but a spokesman said the department was shifting toward using outside sources of research to avoid “duplication” on information that “already is obtained from credible sources.” One month earlier, his office declined to comment about cuts to the team, explaining that it couldn’t answer questions because of “privacy” concerns and “consideration” for the department’s employees.
While Kent has acknowledged in a recent report tabled in Parliament that budget cuts were putting his department’s scientific expertise and capacity to protect Canadians at risk, Environment Canada has said budget cuts will not have any impact on its core services.
The Union of Environment Workers has described the emissions research and measurement unit as a unique team that provides expertise that is not available from other sources.
It consists of seven specialists who travel around Canada, measuring emissions and analyzing data either to help industry, or provide evidence for enforcement officers that want to lay charges. They recently conducted research supporting federal efforts to produce a credible monitoring plan for pollution from Alberta’s oilsands sector, contributing to a chapter on air quality.
The team’s research and analysis has also been used to support development of standards and assessment of pollution sources, analyze effectiveness of pollution-reduction technologies, as well as to strengthen inventories of pollution from different sources.
In terms of measurement, the team would monitor pollution, including cancer-causing emissions, from sources such as hospital incinerators, crematoriums, boilers, smelting furnaces, landfills and coal-fired power generating stations.
But Environment Canada Deputy Minister Paul Boothe told his department the team’s work would end as part of efforts to trim spending by five per cent and reduce its workforce by three per cent over the next three years.
“We will stop research on method development related to measuring industrial emissions …” Boothe wrote in a May 2 email, obtained by Postmedia News. “These reductions will not impact the department’s ability to conduct science, research, or monitoring. Science is and will continue to be the foundation of Environment Canada’s policy and regulatory work.”
Thomas Duck, an atmospheric scientist from Dalhousie University in Halifax, suggested the cuts would jeopardize the government’s plans to create a credible monitoring plan for the oilsands, which are needed to help boost the industry’s environmental reputation on the international stage with scientific evidence about its footprint.
“It’s vandalism of our scientific capacity,” said Duck. “Why announce a (oilsands-monitoring) plan and then undermine your own ability to implement it. So to me it suggests that they never had any intention to follow through on the (oilsands) plan and that it’s for show only.”
The union, representing about 6,000 environment workers, has asked the government to reverse its decision, warning that there were serious public health risks across the country emerging from the government’s decision.
“If they’re not monitoring any more, we don’t know what level of carcinogens are being put in the air which (has) a huge link toward many different types of cancer,” said Todd Panas, president of the Union of Environment Workers. “It just shows the government doesn’t seem to be concerned with the health of Canadians.”
Boothe and a senior Environment Canada manager, Charles Lin, a director general of atmospheric science and technology, both met with members of the team in May after the specialists had received letters about the elimination of their positions.
Original Article
Source: ottawa citizen
Author: Mike De Souza
Details of the cuts emerged through a series of leaked documents and interviews that revealed members of the Ottawa-based group of scientists were told their current roles would be eliminated over the next year.
Environment Minister Peter Kent declined an interview request from Postmedia News on Friday about cuts in his department, but a spokesman said the department was shifting toward using outside sources of research to avoid “duplication” on information that “already is obtained from credible sources.” One month earlier, his office declined to comment about cuts to the team, explaining that it couldn’t answer questions because of “privacy” concerns and “consideration” for the department’s employees.
While Kent has acknowledged in a recent report tabled in Parliament that budget cuts were putting his department’s scientific expertise and capacity to protect Canadians at risk, Environment Canada has said budget cuts will not have any impact on its core services.
The Union of Environment Workers has described the emissions research and measurement unit as a unique team that provides expertise that is not available from other sources.
It consists of seven specialists who travel around Canada, measuring emissions and analyzing data either to help industry, or provide evidence for enforcement officers that want to lay charges. They recently conducted research supporting federal efforts to produce a credible monitoring plan for pollution from Alberta’s oilsands sector, contributing to a chapter on air quality.
The team’s research and analysis has also been used to support development of standards and assessment of pollution sources, analyze effectiveness of pollution-reduction technologies, as well as to strengthen inventories of pollution from different sources.
In terms of measurement, the team would monitor pollution, including cancer-causing emissions, from sources such as hospital incinerators, crematoriums, boilers, smelting furnaces, landfills and coal-fired power generating stations.
But Environment Canada Deputy Minister Paul Boothe told his department the team’s work would end as part of efforts to trim spending by five per cent and reduce its workforce by three per cent over the next three years.
“We will stop research on method development related to measuring industrial emissions …” Boothe wrote in a May 2 email, obtained by Postmedia News. “These reductions will not impact the department’s ability to conduct science, research, or monitoring. Science is and will continue to be the foundation of Environment Canada’s policy and regulatory work.”
Thomas Duck, an atmospheric scientist from Dalhousie University in Halifax, suggested the cuts would jeopardize the government’s plans to create a credible monitoring plan for the oilsands, which are needed to help boost the industry’s environmental reputation on the international stage with scientific evidence about its footprint.
“It’s vandalism of our scientific capacity,” said Duck. “Why announce a (oilsands-monitoring) plan and then undermine your own ability to implement it. So to me it suggests that they never had any intention to follow through on the (oilsands) plan and that it’s for show only.”
The union, representing about 6,000 environment workers, has asked the government to reverse its decision, warning that there were serious public health risks across the country emerging from the government’s decision.
“If they’re not monitoring any more, we don’t know what level of carcinogens are being put in the air which (has) a huge link toward many different types of cancer,” said Todd Panas, president of the Union of Environment Workers. “It just shows the government doesn’t seem to be concerned with the health of Canadians.”
Boothe and a senior Environment Canada manager, Charles Lin, a director general of atmospheric science and technology, both met with members of the team in May after the specialists had received letters about the elimination of their positions.
Original Article
Source: ottawa citizen
Author: Mike De Souza
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