K+S Windsor Salt Ltd. - Environmental Compliance Approval (sewage)

Instrument type: Environmental Compliance Approval (sewage)

ERO number
019-2622
Ministry reference number
4782-BUJK46
Notice type
Instrument
Act
Environmental Protection Act, R.S.O. 1990
Posted by
Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks
Notice stage
Decision
Decision posted
Comment period
October 29, 2020 - December 13, 2020 (45 days) Closed
Last updated

This consultation was open from:
October 29, 2020
to December 13, 2020

Decision summary

We have issued an Environmental Compliance Approval 9156-BUYKSC to K+S Windsor Salt Ltd. for the collection, treatment and disposal of stormwater and salt-impacted stormwater run-off from the sodium chloride rock salt underground mine, located at 200 Morton Drive, City of Windsor, Ontario.

Location details

Site address

200 Morton Drive
Windsor, ON
Canada

Site location details

Lots 39 to 42, Concession 1

Site location map

The location pin reflects the approximate area where environmental activity is taking place.

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Proponent(s)

K+S Windsor Salt Ltd.
200 Morton Drive
Windsor, ON
N9J 3W9
Canada

Decision details

The approved stormwater management works is to to provide an Enhanced Level quality control and quantity control, including the following:

  • a treatment train for the process area, including lined collection ditches, lined swales, oil and grit separators, lift stations, lined dry pond, and dilution mixing tank and discharge channel
  • collection ditch and channels, bypass culvert, oil and grit separator, and enhanced grassed swales for non-process areas

Effluent will be discharged to the Detroit River.

Comments received

Through the registry

0

By email

0

By mail

0
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Supporting materials

View materials in person

Some supporting materials may not be available online. If this is the case, you can request to view the materials in person.

Get in touch with the office listed below to find out if materials are available.

How to Appeal

This instrument decision can be appealed. You have 15 days from January 25, 2021 to begin the appeal process.

Carefully review the information below to learn more about the appeal process.

How to appealClick to Expand Accordion

For instrument decisions published on or after June 1, 2021, please refer to the updated instructions for information on how to appeal a decision.

Appeal process for decisions published before June 1, 2021

If you’re an Ontario resident, you can start the process to appeal this instrument decision.

First, you’ll need to seek leave (i.e. get permission) from the relevant appellate body to appeal the decision.

If the appellate body grants leave, the appeal itself will follow.

Seek leave to appeal

To seek leave to appeal, you need to do these three things:

  1. prepare your application
  2. provide notice to the minister
  3. mail your application to three parties

1. Prepare your application

You’ll need to prepare an application. You may wish to include the following things in your application:

  1. A document that includes:
    • your name, phone number, fax number (if any), and/or email address
    • the ERO number and ministry reference number (located on this page)
    • a statement about whether you are a resident in Ontario
    • your interest in the decision, and any facts you want taken into account in deciding whether you have an interest in the decision
    • the parts of the instrument that you’re challenging
    • whether the decision could result in significant harm to the environment
    • the reason(s) why you believe that no reasonable person – having regard to the relevant law and to any government policies developed to guide decisions of that kind – could have made the decision
    • the grounds (facts) you’ll be using to appeal
    • the outcome you’d like to see
  2. A copy of the instrument (approval, permit, order) that you you are seeking leave to appeal. You’ll find this in the decision notice on the Environmental Registry
  3. Copies of all supporting documents, facts and evidence that you’ll be using to appeal
What is considered

The appeal body will consider the following two questions in deciding whether to grant you leave to appeal:

  1. is there is good reason to believe that no reasonable person, with respect to the relevant law and to any government policies developed to guide decisions of that kind, could have made the decision?
  2. could the decision you wish to appeal result in significant harm to the environment?

2. Provide your notice

You’ll need to provide notice to the Minister of the Environment, Conservation and Parks that you’re seeking leave to appeal.

In your notice, please include a brief description of the:

  • decision that you wish to appeal
  • grounds for granting leave to appeal

You can provide notice by email at minister.mecp@ontario.ca or by mail at:

College Park 5th Floor, 777 Bay St.
Toronto, ON 
M7A 2J3

3. Mail your application

You’ll need to mail your application that you prepared in step #1 to each of these three parties:

  • appellate body
  • issuing authority (the ministry official who issued the instrument)
  • proponent (the company or individual to whom the instrument was issued)

Issuing authority
Fariha Pannu
Manager

Environmental Assessment and Permissions Branch
1st Floor, 135 St Clair Ave W
Toronto, ON
M4V 1P5
Canada

416-314-7092

Proponent(s)

K+S Windsor Salt Ltd.
200 Morton Drive
Windsor, ON
N9J 3W9
Canada


Appellate body

Environmental Review Tribunal
Attention: The Secretary
655 Bay Street
Floor 15
Toronto, Ontario
M5G 1E5
(416) 212-6349
(866) 448-2248
OLT.Registrar@ontario.ca

About the Environmental Review Tribunal


Include the following:

ERO number
019-2622
Ministry reference number
4782-BUJK46

This is not legal advice. Please refer to the Environmental Bill of Rights for exact legal requirements. Consult a lawyer if you need help with the appeal process.

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Original proposal

ERO number
019-2622
Ministry reference number
4782-BUJK46
Notice type
Instrument
Act
Environmental Protection Act, R.S.O. 1990
Posted by
Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks
Proposal posted

Comment period

October 29, 2020 - December 13, 2020 (45 days)

Proposal details

This proposal is for a new Environmental Compliance Approval (sewage works) for K+S Windsor Salt Ltd. to build a stormwater management system (SWM) that will collect, convey, and treat approximately 15 million liters of stormwater generated from up to, and including, a 100-year storm event.

The SWM system will be installed on Windsor Salt property located at 200 Morton Drive in the City of Windsor, Ontario as a solution to treat the elevated chloride levels observed in stormwater runoff from approximately 29.3 hectares of operational site areas, prior to discharging it to the Detroit River.

The proposed sewage works will include channels, swales, catch basins, catch basin manholes, manholes, oil grit separators, diversion berms, storm sewers, a dry storage pond, an emergency spillway, sump pumps, forcemains and a mixing device. The proposed SWM system will provide enhanced-level water quality treatment, storage of surface runoff, and attenuation of peak discharge generated from up to a 100-year storm event.

The SWM pond will have a minimum of 24-hours detention time for 2-year to 100-year storm events, and have the excess active storage capacity to hold all runoff (up to, and including, the 100-year storm event) for up to 168 hours for dilution purposes.

The SWM pond will have a total storage capacity of approximately 17,204 cubic meters. Stormwater runoff stored in the pond will be pumped via the pump station to a mixing device, where it will be diluted with raw water pumped from the Detroit River to ensure that it is below the maximum discharge requirements of 1,500 milligrams per liter chlorides.

Supporting materials

View materials in person

Some supporting materials may not be available online. If this is the case, you can request to view the materials in person.

Get in touch with the office listed below to find out if materials are available.

Comment

Commenting is now closed.

This consultation was open from October 29, 2020
to December 13, 2020

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