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Victoria gets new sewage treatment plant

Progress is finally underway on the project after federal mandate requiring sewage to be treated by 2020
sewage plant
A concept drawing of the McLoughlin Point plant.

 

After decades of delays – and a federal shove – work has started on the Capital Regional District’s (CRE) new sewage treatment plant.

“Isn’t that something? After all of these years, here we are,” said Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps, chair of the district’s sewage committee.

“Really, it’s a day that the region has been waiting for, for almost 30 years if you want to go back to the beginnings of the conversation.”

A progress report to CRD directors notes that the project timeline is driven by the need to comply with a federal mandate to be treating sewage by December 31, 2020.

Harbour Resource Partners will build the treatment plant, a cross-harbour undersea forcemain between Ogden Point and McLoughlin Point, and a marine outfall off McLoughlin.

Construction of the $765 million project is anticipated to complete in November 2020.

Of the total, local taxpayers will be responsible for $306 million, while $459 million will come from the federal and provincial governments.