1) The Technical Industry…

Numéro du REO

019-2298

Identifiant (ID) du commentaire

50195

Commentaire fait au nom

Individual

Statut du commentaire

Commentaire

1) The Technical Industry Standard for Steel Mills will be an optional path to compliance. Under the current regulation it will be possible for the company to simply opt for another Site Specific Standard after the June 2023 date. Thus I am opposing to not have the company go through a full application process for a Site Specific Standard now, rather than offering them an extension of the current one. The company should apply for a 5 year Site Specific Standard and during that time the company can evaluate if the Technical Standard suits them down the road.

2) The main spirit of the Site Specific Standard is working towards significant emission improvements to hopefully one day be in compliance with the Reg. 419 limits. Therefore it does not make much sense to extend the period for 2.5 years without implementing any significant emission improvements. This will a lost opportunity for improvements and an additional burden to be carried by all surrounding areas and citizens.

3) The Site Specific Standard for benzene does not expire until June 2021. Thus I do not see the logic to fast track this extension effective already Jan. 1 2021. I encourage the MECP to hold off on the benzene extension for at least 3 to 5 months and have a meaningful discussion about emission reduction potential first.

4) Access to supporting materials. This access has been very limited and for most part non existent. There are virtually no meaningful documents that the MECP has shared that warrant this extension without demanding further improvements. It even appears that the MECP has not even done a full emissions review prior to proposing this extension.

5) The Site Specific Standard extension is not proposing an update to the action plans for Suspended Particulate Matter (SPM). I ask that a reduction update to the action plans for SPM be included in the extension. Stelco’s limits compared to ArcelorMittal Dofasco’s limits for SPM are almost double and the MECP is nit proposing any reduction for the extension (313 ug/m3 [stelco] vs. 177 ug/m3 [dofasco]). There is no obvious explanation that I can see why this limit should not change to at least 177 ug/m3 or preferably even less.
Stelco is not even making steel on this site anymore.

6) The Site Specific Standard for Suspended Particulate Matter for Stelco expires on the last day of December 2020. The last day of commenting for this Proposal is December 14, 2020. The closeness of these two dates concerns me greatly as Christmas/New Year holidays are between the end of commenting period and the start of 2021. The concern is that there seems to be very little or no time for the MECP to consider all the comments to this proposal from the public regarding changes or amendments to your proposal. This public consultation is this not done in a meaning Gaul and honest way because it will have no impact on your decision.

7) Ministry orders associated with existing Site Specific Standard require Stelco to establish community liaison committees (CLCs) and to host quarterly public meetings with CLCs to update CLC members and the broader community on progress in reducing the emission levels of contaminants for which the plants have Site Specific Standards. It is not clear based on the posting and supporting documents if the MECP will continue to impose this. I want the same order re. Hosting CLC meetings quarterly continued and have a requirement for the company to post quarterly performance data.

8) I suggest to update the action plan regarding making the levels for Benzene in the Site Specific Standard more stringent. This known carcinogen in present in high concentrations in Hamilton as per the Ministry’s Cumulative study. The dangers are great and a concern to all that live in the yellow and purple zone that stretches from Hamilton to Burlington to Stoney Creek and Dundas. I would like to see another reduction for the period of Jan 2021 to June 2023. It has already been 5 years since that level of this contaminant was brought down to 3.9 ug/m3 from 8 ug/m3, it is time to take another step to get closer to the 0.45 ug/m3 goal of Reg. 419 limit