By
- Matteo Cimellaro
- News
- Urban Indigenous Communities in Ottawa
August 13th 2024
Representatives from Kebaowek First Nation touring the area of the proposed nuclear waste facility. Photo submitted
As many as eight black bears are facing eviction from their homes by Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, the company building a nuclear waste facility near the Ottawa River.
A letter sent to the Kebaowek First Nation and obtained by Canada's National Observer says the company is taking action to block the bears from their dens. The letter was sent after representatives from the First Nation found evidence of at least three active bear dens during a tour of the area three weeks ago, Lance Haymond, chief of Kebaowek First Nation, said.
Evidence of those bear dens traces back to data collected for theAlgonquin-led environmental assessment of the waste facility published in 2023.
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The timing of CNL’s decision to evict the bears, with only a week’s notice, has left Kebaowek representatives wondering if the action over the bear dens is “retaliatory” after it challenged the decision to approve the site last month. It is also leaving Kebaowek “no choice” but to look towards a court injunction over the bear dens, Haymond said.
Canada’s National Observercontacted CNL to confirm the number of active dens in the region within and surrounding the waste facility’s pre-construction area, but did not hear back by time of publication.
The company plans to deter the bears from their dens using sensor-based noise emitting devices, as well as weighted plywood and tarps, the letter to Kebaowek states.
Land guardians from the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan, the only Algonquin First Nation within Ontario, will be present to monitor and observe the installation of the deterrents, according to the letter. Pikwakanagan and CNL have a long-term relationship agreement that provides funding for a guardian program to provide monitoring for the nuclear organization.
In an interview, Haymond criticized CNL for using Pikwakanagan to “justify” the construction of the waste facility and the environmental harms it poses. In particular, Haymond is concerned about black bear habitat and the precedent this poses for the eastern wolf. Last month, the wolf species, also known as the Algonquin wolf, wasupgraded from a status of special concern to threatened species.
“We should have been fully involved from the beginning,” Haymond said. Negotiations around Kebaowek involvement in monitoring is ongoing, but right now CNL is “just pushing us aside,” he added.
The company plans to deter the bears from their dens using sensor-based noise emitting devices, as well as weighted plywood and tarps, the letter to Kebaowek states.
In the letter, CNL maintains the activities will not result in any irreparable harm to black bears. But Haymond is not buying it. The location of the forested slope is ideal for the dens given its natural protection from climate change events, according to the Algonquin-led assessment.
“If that's the way they're treating the black bear, can you imagine what they're going to do or want to be doing with the eastern wolf?” Haymond asks.
It’s still unclear what regulations apply to the pre-construction activities. In Ontario, it isillegal to interfere with, damage or destroy black bear dens, but nuclear regulations fall under federal jurisdiction. Canada’s National Observercontacted Ontario and federal officials about jurisdiction, but did not hear back by time of publication.
Even before Kebaowek had heard about the bears, the First Nation filed a judicial review over the construction of the nuclear waste facility, citing it did not do enough to consult and consider Kebaowek’s inherent rights as Indigenous peoples.
“It’s just very presumptuous and ignorant of them to go ahead,” Haymond said. “They’re operating like they’re already going to win [the judicial review].”
Kebaowek has been actively campaigning against the Near Surface Disposal Facility, a nuclear waste site that was approved and licensed by Canada’s nuclear regulator last January. That led to the legal challenge, which brought the consortium before a judge last month.
The court action centres around the United Nations Declaration Act (UNDA), which enshrined the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP) into Canadian law. The declaration specifically references the need for free, prior and informed consent when hazardous waste will be stored in a nation’s territory.
The judge’s decision is not expected for another few months, Haymond toldCanada’s National Observer.
—with files from Natasha Bulowski
Matteo Cimellaro / Canada’s National Observer / Local Journalism Initiative
August 13th 2024
Matteo Cimellaro
Journalist
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Thanks for this story and the unrelenting focus of CNO on important issues. Including the many ways humans demonstrate our inability to share the planet with other species. Or even with each other. We need this quiet attention to detail. Thanks..
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Even in sketchy outline this story bears striking resemblance to the Goldilocks tale: 3 bear dens, one too big? one too small? one just right - but first Goldilocks has to empty all 3 dens in order to test which one is just right, and must keep the bears from coming back to dens she doesn't choose, lest their snores disrupt her nuclear waste dreams!
Someone more clever than I could turn this into a best seller picture book.
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