Grassy Narrows chief, NDP candidate urges Ottawa to talk turkey on mercury
OTTAWA — The chief of a northwestern Ontario reserve —and an NDP candidate in this fall’s federal election — is calling on Indigenous Services Minister Seamus O’Regan to sit down to hammer out an agreement on a long-promised treatment facility for mercury poisoning.
Grassy Narrows First Nation Chief Rudy Turtle, who is running in the federal riding of Kenora, said in an interview on Tuesday that O’Regan has not been willing to meet with him since he came to the community at the end of May in what turned out to be an unsuccessful effort to get the agreement signed.
Grassy Narrows First Nation has suffered from the health impacts of mercury contamination stemming from when a paper mill in Dryden, Ont., dumped 9,000 kilograms of the substance into the English-Wabigoon River system in the 1960s.
“If he (O’Regan) is serious about this project and getting things done, he should talk to me and we should be talking on a regular basis to make sure that the yard stick moves,” Turtle said. “Right now, the yard stick is not moving. We are pretty much at a standstill.”