Thursday, November 27, 2025

Unlined Ponds, Sick Families, and Lessons We Keep Ignoring

🌎💔 Unlined Ponds, Sick Families, and Lessons We Keep Ignoring

Every environmental disaster starts the same way:
👉 A warning is dismissed
👉 A permit is skipped
👉 A pond is left unlined
👉 Someone says, “It’s fine.”

And then decades later, when the soil is poisoned, the rivers are dying, and families are sick, officials shrug and say:
“Well, we issued a fine.”

Today we’re talking about Ground X leaking hydrovac slurry from an unlined pond beside the Pitt River — a tributary of the Fraser. But this isn’t a new story. This is the oldest environmental story in North America.

And real people have lived it.
Real families have buried loved ones.
Entire communities have never recovered.

Let’s remind ourselves what ignoring contamination really means.


🏠☣️ Love Canal: Families Trapped on Toxic Landfill

In the late 1970s, residents of Love Canal in Niagara Falls, NY, started noticing something was wrong:
🧒 Children came home with chemical burns
🤰 Miscarriages skyrocketed
💀 Cancer rates spiked
🌧️ After rainstorms, oily sludge seeped into basements

Lois Gibbs, a young mother, became the voice of the crisis. She discovered her son’s school was built over 20,000 tons of buried chemical waste — including benzene (a known carcinogen).

Her activism forced President Carter to declare a federal emergency.
900 families were evacuated.

But the soil? Still toxic.
The health impacts? Still being studied.
The trauma? Permanent.


🚰😡 Flint, Michigan: A City’s Children Poisoned

In 2014, Flint switched its water source to save money. But the untreated river water corroded old pipes, releasing lead — a neurotoxin that damages children’s brains permanently.

Lead levels in some homes were over 13,000 ppb.
The EPA’s limit? 15 ppb.

LeeAnne Walters, a mother of four, noticed her children developing rashes and illnesses. She helped uncover the truth when officials denied anything was wrong.

Flint’s children will carry lifelong effects:
🧠 Learning disabilities
📉 Lower IQ
🩺 Chronic health issues

This is what happens when governments claim contamination is “under control.”


🌊🧠 Grassy Narrows: 50 Years of Mercury Poisoning

In the 1960s and 70s, a paper mill dumped 9,000 kg of mercury into the English-Wabigoon River system.

The consequences?
💥 Mercury bioaccumulated in fish
💥 Fish fed families
💥 Families developed neurological mercury poisoning

Symptoms still affecting people today:
🌀 Tremors
🌀 Memory loss
🌀 Speech problems
🌀 Vision and balance impairment

Judy Da Silva, a community leader from Grassy Narrows, has been speaking for decades about the suffering:

“They took our river. They took our health. And nothing can give that back.”

Fines didn’t fix this.
Promises didn’t fix this.
Generations continue to pay.


🌵💚 Erin Brockovich & Hinkley: The Unlined Pond Disaster

This is where the Ground X story hits hard.

In Hinkley, California, the utility company PG&E used unlined ponds to store wastewater contaminated with hexavalent chromium (Chromium-6) — a known carcinogen.

The toxins seeped into groundwater for decades.
Families drank it, bathed in it, cooked with it.

Roberta Walker, one of the residents featured in the Erin Brockovich case, suffered massive health problems. Her story — and Erin’s relentless investigation — exposed the contamination and won a $333 million settlement.

But here’s the truth Erin Brockovich still says today:

“No amount of money ever gives people back their health.”

Unlined pond.
Ignored warnings.
People sick for life.

Sound familiar?


🐟🌊 Metro Vancouver: A Disaster in Slow Motion

Ground X did exactly what ruined Hinkley:

❌ Stored waste in an unlined pond
❌ Leaked effluent into the ground
❌ Ignored repeated warnings
❌ Operated beside a river system full of salmon
❌ Failed to provide proof of safety

Samples showed contaminants — including benzo(a)pyrene — at more than double provincial standards.

Benzo(a)pyrene is:
🔥 Carcinogenic
🔥 Harmful to fish, plants, and invertebrates
🔥 Persistent in soil and water

So here’s the question:

Do these companies want to eat the salmon they’re contaminating? 🐟

Do they want their kids drinking the water they polluted? 🚰

Do they want to live beside the river they’re harming? 🌊

Because families along the Fraser do.
Indigenous communities do.
Wildlife does.

The river cannot defend itself.
Regulators tried — four warnings in five years.
And now a fine.
$454,000.

But that doesn’t repair a river.
It doesn’t protect salmon.
It doesn’t undo a leak that already happened.

A fine is a receipt.
Not justice.


🛑❗ We Know How These Stories End — And We Can’t Pretend Anymore

Every environmental catastrophe begins with the same mistakes.

Every community disaster begins with: ☠️ “The pond is fine.”
☠️ “It’s only a small leak.”
☠️ “There’s no proof.”
☠️ “Everything is under control.”

Until suddenly — it’s not.
And mothers like Lois Gibbs, LeeAnne Walters, and Judy Da Silva are left fighting for their children’s lives.

We cannot afford another Love Canal.
Another Flint.
Another Grassy Narrows.
Another Hinkley.

Not here.
Not on the Fraser.
Not to our salmon.
Not to our families.


💚🌍 If companies want to operate near our rivers, the question is simple:

Would you let your children swim there?
Would you drink that water?
Would you feed your grandbabies salmon from that river?

If the answer is no, then it’s already too dangerous.

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