Deputy mayor calls for stronger remediation rules after 'war zone' left on Bathurst waterfront - Action News
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New Brunswick

Deputy mayor calls for stronger remediation rules after 'war zone' left on Bathurst waterfront

Bathurst residents will see the old Smurfit-Stone mill site cleaned up after decades of disrepair, but it will cost the province millions.

Taxpayers on the hook for between $12 and $16 million after failures to clean up Smurfit-Stone mill site

An empty site with old silos and building materials.
The province put out a request in late August for bidders to clean up the Smurfit-Stone mill site. (CBC)

As the province selects a bidder to clean up an abandoned Bathurst mill site, a local official wants to see stronger rules to prevent the same situation from happening again.

For the past 20 years, towering silos, old concrete pillars and tanks have sat on a waterfront property spanning more than eight hectares, or 20 acres, along the main drive into Bathurst, N.B.

Once an employer of thousands and a sign of economic prosperity, Deputy Mayor Michael Willett saidtheoldSmurfit-Stone mill site has been an eyesorefor the northern town since about 2005.

"Right now it looks like a war zone,"Willettsaid. "It's a dangerous site. There's holes, there's pits, there's tanks that are left there. The silos are unreal. The building has had numerous fires in it with the homeless people going in there."

Three large cement cilos stand on an abandoned lot along with a green office building on a rainy day.
The site of the former Smurfit-Stone mill in Bathurst remained untouched for nearly 20 years after the company shut down in 2005. (Serge Bouchard/Radio-Canada)

In late August, the province issued a call for bidders on site demolition, after taking ownership of the site in June.

That comes after former private owners failed to complete the required environmental remediation.

But the cleanup will cost taxpayers between $12 and $16 milliona situation Willettfinds unacceptable.

"We don't really have any rules and regulations on remediation and the way things are done, so if you don't have a good corporate citizen, they can just pack up and leave leave the province, leave the cities with the problems to clean up and fend for themselves."

It's an issue a2022 report from the province's auditor general zeroed in on.

It found theprovince had stopped tracking "orphan contaminated sites" those abandoned by a private owner unable to afford remediationsince 2009.

The former mill site in Bathurst.
The Smurfit-Stone property is located along a main entry point into Bathurst. (Radio-Canada)

Auditor General Paul Martin wrote that if no one takes ownership,orphan properties revert back to provincial ownershipand the longer they are contaminated, the more costly remediation may become.

That report recommends the Department of Environment and Local Government re-introduce a program to track and address orphan contaminated sites.

It's not clear whether the province has implemented that, as its response to the auditor general agrees to "explore options for government consideration."

The province did not respond on Friday to a request for information about site cleanup obligations and whether it would consider making an update.

Willett suggests addressing the problem by having companies pay up front for possible remediation costs.

"There's got to be some kind of fund that these companies pay into, that if something like this happen, that it's not subsidized by the government or taxpayers again," he said.

Willett said the city had explored the idea of taking over site cleanup and development, but realized it wasn't feasible after a study with the province's Regional Development Corporation.

"We found out exactly what the problems were and how much it was going to cost, and it was definitely not something the city could do by itself," he said.

"It would bankrupt the city."

The parcels of land in question are locatednorth of Bridge Street, south of Bridge Street, and west of the Nepisiguit River, and have more than $2.5 million in property taxes owed.

Now an eyesore,Willettenvisions the land post-cleanup offering waterfront housing, new businessesand trails.

"It's right on the river, it's just a gorgeous, gorgeous place. It's just sad to see that for 20 years it's been in that state."

With files from Information Morning