http://www.vancouverobserver.com/news/toxic-waste-facility-could-risk-catastrophe-fraser-stolo-advisor
But the safety measures are not enough to convince those who are alarmed by the idea of hazardous waste being housed within the floodplain of the lower Fraser, and opposition to the project appears to be growing. More than 20 groups representing 120,000 people have voiced their concern over the proposed location of the plant, noting the hazards of floods, earthquakes, or fires— or even trucks carrying hazardous waste to the plant going through a guardrail on the Vedder Bridge.I thought the protest was all about the proximity of the facility to the Fraser River. Now it includes the risk of trucks carrying hazardous waste to the facility going off the road into the Vedder River. I guess that is a possibility, but so is a commercial airliner crashing into the facility, the derailment of a train carrying hazardous materials along the same area or a semi-trailer unit carrying hazardous materials (materials already allowed to travel on our roadways, but environmentalists don’t notice the transportation of hazardous goods decals attached to the truck) going off the highway on any number of stream crossings. The first one is the most unlikely to happen, but the other two are not. How would Crey rate the risks of these other potential catastrophes?
Secondly, how else is the waste supposed to get from the source to the recycling facility if not by road or even rail? How do we avoid having it moved across bridges? I mean if the current proposed site is rejected then this hazardous material will have to travel to another location, by road or rail, potentially crossing streams that drain directly into a major river like the Fraser. These critics apparently don't dispute the need for this recycling facility, but they don’t want it in their backyard and they are providing no alternative location. According to critics there are many alternative locations, but they are not saying where. What they really want to say is “Don’t dump your garbage here. Go away and locate somewhere else in the province”, but that wouldn’t be very “environmentally correct”. Meanwhile, “the garbage is being dumped here” as most CFL bulbs are disposed of in landfills or illegally off the side of some Forest Service Road.