Oilpatch Waste Disposal Company, Tervita, Poisoning and Sickening residents of Unity Saskatchewan? Shame on Brad Wall’s Polluting Petro State for downplaying the many that were sickened, claiming a “strong odor” had “in some cases caused personal discomfort.”

Snap from news clip in last article below

Subject: Sounds Like DMDS To Me!!
Date: Thu, 1 Feb 2018 13:31:52 -0700
From: Stewart Shields <email hidden; JavaScript is required>
To: email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required
CC: email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required, Ministerial Unit email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required, email hidden; JavaScript is required

If indeed the Caroline Shell Complex was involved in this incident I would suggest the product fouling the Saskatchewan air has something to do with DMDS a product I used
at one time to dissolve solid sulphur in sour natural gas wells!! A simple call to the Caroline plant to discover if the material sent all the way to Saskatchewan had any contact with DMDS or any of it’s cousins should satisfy the answer to the problem!! [EXCEPT, SHELL IS NOT ANSWERING QUESTIONS ABOUT WHAT WAS IN THEIR SHIPMENT!] DMDS is extremely very very smelly and has a liking for rubber products including Buna N –that would explain losing packing in a disposal pump !! DMDS may come with several off-shoot names like Merox, but Shell should know very well what they shipped and if indeed it had contact with DMDS or one of it’s cousins !!

Stewart Shields, Lacombe Alberta [Mr. Shields is well experienced in the toxic ways of Shell at Caroline]

This oilpatch town was overcome by a mystery gas. Now its residents are asking, what made us sick? by Robert Cribb, Jan. 31, 2018, Toronto Star

Residents of Unity, Sask., still don’t know what they breathed in after a “disgusting” gas leak earlier this month. The operators of the nearby Tervita waste disposal site say the smell was “not hazardous or dangerous.” [Since when does an oil company, especially in the waste disposal business, tell the truth?] The province says it’s investigating. [When does a Canadian province or regulator really investigate?  They are experts at lying, deflection, shaming and bullying harmed citizens, and engaging in fraud to help corporate polluters cover-up their toxic crimes and revictimize and or blame the victims just like so many authorities, including judges, do in sexual assault cases.]

Unity, Sask., population 2,500, was the site of a mysterious incident Jan. 2 at a nearby oil and gas facility that caused a toxic smell and sickened many residents.
Unity, Sask., population 2,500, was the site of a mysterious incident Jan. 2 at a nearby oil and gas facility that caused a toxic smell and sickened many residents.  (DAYNE WINTER/GLOBAL NEWS)  

UNITY, SASK.—It was late evening when the pungent odour began entering people’s homes.

“Overwhelming” one resident called it. “Disgusting,” said another who inhaled the smell wafting through this western Saskatchewan town of 2,500 on Jan. 2.

“It gave me a migraine and nausea and burning eyes and throat,” one local wrote on the community’s Facebook page. Others quickly joined sharing similar symptoms.

By the next day, some residents were thinking about leaving town.

“No one knows what’s going on,” one wrote. “I’m thinking of packing my children up and leaving before it gets any worse in my home!”

Neither the town’s emergency alert system nor the provincial alert system issued warnings to residents; no decision has been made on charges against the waste disposal facility that has acknowledged being the source of the emission; and the incident appears nowhere in the province’s tracking database, a joint investigation by the Toronto Star and Global News has found.

“Nothing went off that night,” says Unity resident Lindsey Ann Soderholm. “There was nothing over the radio … Nobody called … There was nothing.”

Nearly a month later, the cause of the smell remains a mystery in Unity, one of the hundreds of towns that dot the western Canadian landscape where the oil industry’s economic benefits [What benefits? Where? Saskatchewan, Alberta and BC are falling apart, infrastructure decimating from wear and tear by oil patch trucks and water and waste hauling; public education and health are in tatters, while oil and gas companies get constant billions in subsidies and freebies from taxpayers, and still refuse to clean up their toxic waste and used up facilities, ever whining pathetically for more and more and more deregulation, social assistance to bolster their billions in profit raping and walking away from their responsibilities to clean up, with regulators and governments bending triple over backwards to help the polluters] and its public health risks coexist in constant tension. 

A day after the incident, operators of the Tervita waste disposal site, which sits two kilometres east of town, issued a statement confirming a malfunctioning pump had released an “unpleasant smell” that was “not hazardous or dangerous.”

Tervita declined interview requests for this story, sending a two-sentence email: “The Saskatchewan Ministry of Economy is currently conducting an investigation and we are working with them. We have no additional information to provide at this time.”

The Tervita facility near Unity is a waste disposal facility that handles high-risk materials.
The Tervita facility near Unity is a waste disposal facility that handles high-risk materials.  (DAYNE WINTER/GLOBAL NEWS)  

The province did not issue a statement for 10 daysconfirming to residents on Jan. 12 that a “strong odour” had “in some cases caused personal discomfort.” [!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!] The province dispatched inspectors to investigate the risk and the cause of the incident.

Provincial officials also declined interview requests but sent a statement confirming the province is investigating “over the next several weeks with a full report prepared once it is completed.” The investigation will also examine if the official response to the incident was “appropriate.”

Many in Unity believe the answer is no.

“The critical question still has not been answered,” says resident Morice Miller. “What exactly was in that toxic emission and was there any danger to the health and well being of the citizens of Unity?”

Read more:

‘Like saying cancer is not a disease’: Ottawa considers declaring deadly oilpatch gas non-toxic

That rotten stench in the air? It’s the smell of deadly gas and secrecy

Toxic gas nearly killed this oil worker. His employer never told the province

The province’s characterization of the incident as causing “personal discomfort” is, Miller says, “more than a bit” of an understatement.

“The town was unprepared. Tervita was unprepared …. The government of Saskatchewan, especially, was unprepared and that is unacceptable,” says the 71-year-old. “This cannot happen again. Period …. What is more important, the jobs or the health of the citizens of Unity? For me, that’s a no-brainer.”

Alexandria Stubbs’ family dog refused to go outside on the day the smell came to town.

“The smell was quite strong,” says the mother of two small children. “Within just the couple of minutes the door was open, it filled our living room … I went on Facebook to see if anyone else was bothered and saw the whole town was complaining. That’s when we started brainstorming a plan to pack up the kids and evacuate town.

“There has been no attempt to debrief the people of this town as to what happened and the severity of it, or what to do if and when it happens again.”

Soderholm, a 32-year-old mother of two, thought she had a gas leak in her house. She called the fire department and was told to leave, go outside into the frigid cold with her children, aged 5 and 13, and wait for someone to come.

After 25 minutes sitting in her car, Soderholm decided the smell was stronger outside so they went back inside, logged on computer and discovered others experiencing the same thing.

“My daughter had a headache and the headache lasted until the next day,” she says. “I had a migraine and was feeling nauseous.”

In the end, she says no one responded to her call.

“Nobody came to test the air around my house,” she says. “We have no idea what it was … (The Town of Unity) completely brushed it under the rug …. Once you start showing physical reactions to a chemical or a gas in the air, that’s definitely cause for concern.

“I would like them to be fully honest about what happened, what we were breathing, the concentration levelsand what they’re planning to do so that it doesn’t happen again,” says Soderholm. [Expect no help, no truth, no facts, nothing but cover-up and fraud, from company, province, and emergency experts and officials]

Residents fear that the emission could have contained hydrogen sulphide (H2S), a toxic, potentially deadly gas that killed one oilfield worker in Saskatchewan in 2014 and injured others.

The province told the Star and Global News that there is no H2S monitor in Unity.

In its statement, the government said ministry staff visited the town with air-monitoring equipment, including H2S monitors, on Jan. 3 and found no toxic emissions. [Typical!  Regulators always wait until the incident has passed before testing for emissions, or they test upwind.] But concerns remain about what was in the air the previous night.

On Jan. 2, Carey Baker, the town’s director of economic development, picked up air-quality testing equipment that the province had left with him after a previous incident [What incident?] and took air samples along the main street.

Baker sent the results to the province’s ministry of environment on Jan. 4 where they forwarded them to Ottawa. Environment Canada officials in Ottawa confirmed they received the samples. Results are expected shortly and will be shared with the province. [Be assured the data will vanish or get altered to show nothing toxic, or if they can’t do that without looking too guilty, the results will just never be “shared” or made public. Ernst remains waiting for public baseline water testing records to be released to her after being ordered to in official inquiry of an Alberta authority unlawfully withholding public records she had FOIPed for in 2008 and paid masses of money for]

Carey Baker works for the town as an economic development officer.
Carey Baker works for the town as an economic development officer.  (DAYNE WINTER/GLOBAL NEWS)  

Tervita’s Unity facility is licensed to receive, store, treat and dispose of waste, including hazardous and “hydrocarbon-contaminated” wastes from the petrochemical industry, a provincial statement confirmed.

Some residents believe the incident may be connected to a shipment of waste from a Shell Canada plant in Caroline, Alta. But there’s no clarity on what was in that shipment. Shell declined to answer that question.

“As one of Tervita’s customers, we were made aware that there was an issue near their Unity Cavern facility on Jan. 2, 2018,” reads a statement from Shell. “We remain in touch with the company as well as local regulators to assist in any investigation being conducted as needed.”

Brooke Ceslak, 23, is a former oil industry worker who, like many in Unity, doesn’t support any response that would undermine the plant’s operations and the jobs it provides.  [Including admitting the truth about a town being poisoned? How insane, corrupt, selfish and greedy is that?] “If it’s dangerous it needs to be told,” she says. “But being that they said it wasn’t dangerous … I guess we just have to believe them. But it would be good to see all the proof.” [Why on earth would anyone believe Shell, or the province, or regulator, or Tervita?]

“I definitely don’t want (the facility) shut down.” [Let’s just keep on poisoning innocent families and ruining the brains of our children. Nice & stupid & greedy.]

For many, the prospect of a similar incident re-occuring without a warning and a detailed explanation from authorities has left lingering implications.

“If there’s a risk of that happening again, I’ll be moving,” says Solderholm. [Emphasis added]

With files from Patti Sonntag and Patricia Elliott

Sask. Ministry of Economy launches probe into strong ‘crude oil-like’ odour in Unity, Residents say the smell made them sick in early January, still no answers by CBC News, Jan 31, 2018

Related Stories

The Government of Saskatchewan is investigating the cause of a strong odour in the town of Unity, which made many people sick earlier this month.

Some residents took to the town’s Facebook page to share their own grief over the issue. A few said they experienced nausea and migraines on Jan. 2 due to the smell.

“Many people got sick in the town of Unity, including my wife,” wrote Morice Miller.

“I had a friend tell me they got a headache instantly and their eyes burned. That cannot be allowed to happen.”

The town of about 2,500 people, 170 km northwest of Saskatoon, is known for its involvement in the oil industry.

Unity resident Brooke Ceslak said she worked in that industry and is still an advocate and supporter. She said it smelled like oil.

“I got a headache before bed, the smell was gone soon after, and I woke up fine,” she said. [With how many brain cells damaged or dead?]

“I do believe better safety measures should be put into effect for the future, if possible.  This is an oil town, so although it shouldn’t happen, people shouldn’t be surprised by it. If they don’t like it, they could move anywhere else in the world.” [Why such pathetic clinging to abusing, lying polluters and enabling their abuses? Moving is expensive, most families can’t afford to move and certainly not to just anywhere in the world, and why should they?  Why pull children from their friends and community, out of school, lose school days so that a polluter can keep polluting and poisoning a community?  Even if no one lived in Unity, the company shouldn’t be enabled to pollute. It’s not just humans that need safe clean air.]

Malfunctioning pump blamed
The Tervita Unity Waste Processing Facility, about two kilometres southeast of the town, handles wastes from the oil and gas industry. It released a statement on Jan. 3, attributing the odour to a malfunctioning pump at the plant which has since been fixed. The company said it was not hazardous or dangerous. [Prove it.]

Tervita declined to speak to CBC News but said it is working with the Saskatchewan Ministry of Economy on its investigation.

“We have no additional information to provide at this time,” a spokesperson wrote.

Carey Baker, director of economic development in Unity, said he used an air-sampling canister provided from the Ministry of Environment to take an air sample.

“It was a crude oil-like smell,” said Baker. “That’s how I would describe it.”

Consultants to help review data

The province did not respond publicly for 10 days following complaints. [Thank Steve Harper Twin and Polluter Enabler Brad Wall.]

The issue was initially reported to the Saskatchewan Ministry of Environment, but because the Ministry of the Economy licenses the plant, it initiated an investigation. A statement from the Ministry was put out on Jan. 12.

It said field workers from Lloydminster inspected the facility using radar cameras and hydrogen sulphide monitors to evaluate H2S emissions levels. No emissions were identified. [Of course not, the monitoring was initiated way too late, as is standard in petro state jurisdictions in Canada, like Saskatchewan]

The Ministry contracted consulting firm Intrinsik Corp. [Run by Encana’s favourite sour gas cover-up expert, Don Davies, who works for companies to con the public into believing industry’s deadly sour gas is not toxic. What fraud will Intrinsik help create to cover-up Tervita’s pollution?] on Jan. 8 to help its engineers review dataon the waste delivered to Tervita. Intrinsik Corp will be providing advice on the investigation methods, testing protocols and interpretation of findings. [Purpose to help the province be at its fraudulent best covering-up any law violations, pollution and health harms, similar to intrinsik down playing the toxicity of frac chemicals?]

Samples collected at the facility were sent to Ottawa for analysis by the Environment and Climate Change Canada.

According to the province, the investigation will continue for the next several weeks and once complete, a full report will be released. The report will include an action plan.

“It would be my hope, and I think everyone’s hope, that information would come from the investigation that may provide some suggestions as to how to ensure similar incidents don’t occur in the future,” said Baker. [Emphasis added]

This oilpatch town was overcome by a mysterious odour. Now its residents are asking, what made us sick? by Rob Cribb with The Toronto Star Special to Global News

MUST WATCH: An industrial leak late at night on January 2nd immediately made many people in the small town of Unity, SK feel ill. Global News investigates what happened.

UNITY, SASK.—It was late evening when the pungent odour began entering people’s homes.

“Overwhelming” one resident called it. “Disgusting,” said another who inhaled the smell wafting through this western Saskatchewan town of 2,500 on Jan. 2.

“It gave me a migraine and nausea and burning eyes and throat,” one local wrote on the community’s Facebook page. Others quickly joined sharing similar symptoms.

By the next day, some residents were thinking about leaving town.

“No one knows what’s going on,” one wrote. “I’m thinking of packing my children up and leaving before it gets any worse in my home!”

READ MORE: Saskatchewan Energy Minister responds to investigation about potentially deadly gas from oil wells

Neither the town’s emergency alert system nor the provincial alert system issued warnings to residents; no decision has been made on charges against the waste disposal facility that has acknowledged being the source of the emission; and the incident appears nowhere in the province’s tracking database, a joint investigation by the Toronto Star and Global News has found.

“Nothing went off that night,” says Unity resident Lindsey Ann Soderholm. “There was nothing over the radio … Nobody called … There was nothing.”

Nearly a month later, the cause of the smell remains a mystery in Unity, one of the hundreds of towns that dot the western Canadian landscape where the oil industry’s economic benefits and its public health risks coexist in constant tension.

A day after the incident, operators of the Tervita waste disposal site, which sits two kilometres east of town, issued a statement confirming a malfunctioning pump had released an “unpleasant smell” that was “not hazardous or dangerous.”

Tervita declined interview requests for this story, sending a two-sentence email: “The Saskatchewan Ministry of Economy is currently conducting an investigation and we are working with them. We have no additional information to provide at this time.”

WATCH: Mo Miller recounts the ‘burning’ smell in Unity from the evening of Jan. 2, which made many people in the town fall ill.

The province did not issue a statement for 10 days, confirming to residents on Jan. 12 that a “strong odour” had “in some cases caused personal discomfort.” The province dispatched inspectors to investigate the risk and the cause of the incident.

Provincial officials also declined interview requests but sent a statement confirming the province is investigating “over the next several weeks with a full report prepared once it is completed.” The investigation will also examine if the official response to the incident was “appropriate.”

Many in Unity believe the answer is no.

“The critical question still has not been answered,” says resident Morice Miller. “What exactly was in that toxic emission and was there any danger to the health and well being of the citizens of Unity?”

The province’s characterization of the incident as causing “personal discomfort” is, Miller says, “more than a bit” of an understatement.

“The town was unprepared. Tervita was unprepared …. The government of Saskatchewan, especially, was unprepared and that is unacceptable,” says the 71-year-old. “This cannot happen again. Period …. What is more important, the jobs or the health of the citizens of Unity? For me, that’s a no-brainer.”

Alexandria Stubbs’ family dog refused to go outside on the day the smell came to town.

“The smell was quite strong,” says the mother of two small children. “Within just the couple of minutes the door was open, it filled our living room … I went on Facebook to see if anyone else was bothered and saw the whole town was complaining. That’s when we started brainstorming a plan to pack up the kids and evacuate town.

“There has been no attempt to debrief the people of this town as to what happened and the severity of it, or what to do if and when it happens again.”

READ MORE: Is Saskatchewan ignoring the potentially deadly gas from oil wells?

Soderholm, a 32-year-old mother of two, thought she had a gas leak in her house. She called the fire department and was told to leave, go outside into the frigid cold with her children, aged 5 and 13, and wait for someone to come.

After 25 minutes sitting in her car, Soderholm decided the smell was stronger outside so they went back inside, logged on computer and discovered others experiencing the same thing.

“My daughter had a headache and the headache lasted until the next day,” she says. “I had a migraine and was feeling nauseous.”

In the end, she says no one responded to her call.

“Nobody came to test the air around my house,” she says. “We have no idea what it was … (The Town of Unity) completely brushed it under the rug …. Once you start showing physical reactions to a chemical or a gas in the air, that’s definitely cause for concern.

“I would like them to be fully honest about what happened, what we were breathing, the concentration levels and what they’re planning to do so that it doesn’t happen again,” says Soderholm.

Residents fear that the emission could have contained hydrogen sulphide (H2S), a toxic, potentially deadly gas that killed one oilfield worker in Saskatchewan in 2014 and injured others.

The province told the Star and Global News that there is no H2S monitor in Unity. [Intentional: If you do not seek, you will not find; if you do not monitor, you will also not find]

In its statement, the government said ministry staff visited the town with air-monitoring equipment, including H2S monitors, on Jan. 3 and found no toxic emissions. But concerns remain about what was in the air the previous night.

On Jan. 2, Carey Baker, the town’s director of economic development, picked up air-quality testing equipment that the province had left with him after a previous incident and took air samples along the main street.

Baker sent the results to the province’s ministry of environment on Jan. 4 where they forwarded them to Ottawa. Environment Canada officials in Ottawa confirmed they received the samples. Results are expected shortly and will be shared with the province. [Highly likely that the province will not share the data or report with the public, and not even with the harmed residents of Unity]

Tervita’s Unity facility is licensed to receive, store, treat and dispose of waste, including hazardous and “hydrocarbon-contaminated” wastes from the petrochemical industry, a provincial statement confirmed. Some residents believe the incident may be connected to a shipment of waste from a Shell Canada plant in Caroline, Alta. But there’s no clarity on what was in that shipment. Shell declined to answer that question.

“As one of Tervita’s customers, we were made aware that there was an issue near their Unity Cavern facility on Jan. 2, 2018,” reads a statement from Shell. “We remain in touch with the company as well as local regulators to assist in any investigation being conducted as needed.”

Brooke Ceslak, 23, is a former oilworker who, like many in Unity, doesn’t support any response that would undermine the plant’s operations and the jobs it provides.

“If it’s dangerous it needs to be told,” she says. “But being that they said it wasn’t dangerous … I guess we just have to believe them. But it would be good to see all the proof.”

“I definitely don’t want (the facility) shut down.”

For many, the prospect of a similar incident re-occuring without a warning and a detailed explanation from authorities has left lingering implications.

“If there’s a risk of that happening again, I’ll be moving,” says Solderholm. [Emphasis added]

-With files from Carolyn Jarvis, Meaghan Craig, Patti Sonntag and Trish Elliott

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