Kingston, Ont. man says animals dying due to pollution from third crossing construction
Global News
A Kingston, Ont. man says he's pulled multiple dead animals from the banks of Lake Ontario near his apartment and suspects the deaths are the result of a nearby construction site.
A Kingston, Ont. man is sounding the alarm about the impact of the third bridge construction on wildlife.
He claims animals are dying along the shoreline after eating styrofoam that has spilled into the river.
Carl Hanna walks the path behind his apartment every day with his dog and he says he’s disturbed by the number of dead animals he’s been finding along the west riverbank from the Waaban crossing construction where he lives.
“I’ve taken out two dead beavers, two dead muskrats, a swan. There’s thousands of fish up on the beach over here,” Hanna says.
He says that he has cleaned up the shores near his house multiple times when styrofoam has washed up.
He says that it comes from something called “the turbidity curtain” — a floating barrier that extends underwater to keep anything from escaping the third crossing construction area. But he says the barrier has been chewed by muskrats, releasing some of the debris, which eventually worked its way downstream.
“My concern is that it’s not getting cleaned up quite enough, and this year I’ve noticed a headcount of dead animals through this bay that I’ve never seen before,” Hanna says.
At the site of the Waaban crossing construction, City of Kingston commissioner of major projects, Mark Van Buren, said that while there was a problem with muskrats chewing the curtain and having styrofoam escape, his team has been as diligent as possible when it comes to cleanup.