Grassy Narrows mercury protesters dump grey liquid at Queen’s Park
Protesters handcuffed by police, say the substance is corn starch with water and soluble paint
Grassy Narrows mercury poisoning protesters dumped grey liquid in front of Queen’s Park and then were taken into custody by police on Thursday morning.
The spill happened just before 10:30 a.m. in front of the steps to the legislature. Security asked people to move back from the liquid on to the lawn and then police pushed people back further to the south end of the lawn “for safety,” according to officers on scene.
Toronto fire are on scene trying to figure out what the substance is, but one protester told the crew that it’s corn starch with water and soluble paint.
One of the protestors told CBC News that if the spill were in Grassy Narrows “the government would take 50 years to find out what the grey stuff is.”
A CBC News reporter saw the protestors handcuffed and taken away from the scene by police.
The south lawn of Queen’s Park is closed off as Toronto police, Toronto Fire and the Legislative Security Service investigate the grey substance.
The legislature has not been evacuated.
Mercury in waterways
In a report released in May, environmental scientists determined that there is an unknown source of mercury around where people in Grassy Narrows catch fish.
That prompted allegations there is a hidden pile of mercury barrels poisoning a northern Ontario river. Protesters charge that the mercury dumped in the waterways near the community has existed there for nearly 60 years and has never been cleaned up.
“We know that our river can be made safe,” Simon Fobister, a chief in the Grassy Narrows First Nation, said earlier this year. “Are our lives worth less than others to the government?”
Thursday morning, Premier Kathleen Wynne said her government is “determined” to solve the problem.
“If I had the ability to go to Grassy Narrows with a crew and clean that mercury up I would do it tomorrow,” Wynne told CBC’s Metro Morning.
The challenge, she said, “is that there’s been competing science. And right now there’s a report that says there may actually be a way to clean up the mercury that’s trapped in the sediment at the bottom of the lake and the river.”
However, the science she was given as minister for aboriginal affairs years ago suggested that disturbing the mercury could re-contaminate the water, she said.
The province is committed to finding a solution, she said. Ontario’s environment minister and a group of scientists are headed to the community next week, she said.
“If there is a new technique or methodology we will absolutely find a way to get that cleaned up,” Wynne said.