Establish a long-term 'Community Well-being and Recreation' monitoring program to track the impact of industrialization on local land access and the Dyment Recreation Hall.
Strategic Rationale
"The filing uses terms like 'intergenerational equity' to justify the project, yet the local narrative indicates a fear of losing recreational heritage and social cohesion. The Dyment Recreation Hall is a critical hub in an unorganized territory with few services. A triennial monitoring mandate would ensure the Proponent is held accountable for the 'socially responsible' label they have applied to the project. This provides an advantage by creating a formal mechanism to measure and mitigate the 'stigma effect' and the loss of crown land access, ensuring that the project does not destroy the local social fabric while pursuing national climate goals."
Source Context
Understanding the Impacts of Nuclear Waste on our Community
This digital archive houses the public comments submitted to the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada regarding Project 88774: The Nuclear Waste Management Organization Deep Geological Repository (DGR) for Canada's Used Nuclear Fuel Project. The impact assessment is led jointly by the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada and the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission. This archive preserves community perspectives, concerns, and observations shared during the assessment process, particularly in relation to Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario and the communities of Dyment and Borups Corners who are the closest and most impacted of all in the process.