Politics

Canada mishandling nuclear waste plans, Indigenous, environmental groups warn

First Nations leaders say they have not been properly consulted about the prospect of a nuclear waste disposal site being established northwest of Ottawa near a prominent nuclear research centre.

Anishinabek Nation not consulted about proposed dump site near Ottawa River, says deputy grand chief

Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, a private company, has plans for a permanent nuclear waste disposal site at Chalk River — plans that have been criticized by a concerned citizen's group as being "cheap, dirty, unsafe." (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

First Nations leaders say they have not been properly consulted about the prospect of a nuclear waste disposal site being established northwest of Ottawa near a prominent nuclear research centre.

Environmental groups also say the controversy over the site near Chalk River, Ont., illustrates the fact that the federal government lacks suitable policies to regulate the handling of nuclear waste.

Glen Hare, deputy grand chief of the Anishinabek Nation, says his people were not consulted about the proposed dump site, which is located less than a kilometre away from the Ottawa River.

Representatives from local environmental advocacy groups say two other proposals for permanent radioactive waste — one in Manitoba and another in Ontario — contradict International Atomic Energy Agency guidelines.

Both the Indigenous and the environmental groups are calling on the agency to investigate Canada's waste management practices.

They took part in a news conference today that ended with a rally at Parliament Hill, and coincided with a discussion on radioactive waste and Canada's First Nations at UN headquarters.