Collection of Meaningful Environmental Data

Posted by on May 28, 2015 in Blog |

If you have read any of our previous blog posts, attended any of our seminars or webinars, or read about how we have solved soil and groundwater problems, you know we place a lot of emphasis on getting each step right. And getting each step right begins with the collection of environmental data in the field.  In fact, last year, one of my colleagues, Clifford Lawton, wrote what amounted to a treatise on the importance of proper sample collection (see Soil and Groundwater...

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Seven Common, Environmental Site-Assessment Mistakes

Posted by on Apr 15, 2015 in Blog |

  In our last blog, I asked Dr. Michael Sklash questions relating to TCE – how it behaves in the environment, what to do if you had a release, etc… While Mike did not mention it in our interview, a great number of our projects (regardless of the contaminant) begin with a peer review of the existing work (investigation, remediation, etc).  So, I asked Mike to share, based on his experience, the most common mistakes he has seen over the last 27 years when doing peer reviews....

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TCE Found in London, Ontario, Groundwater: What you need to know about TCE

Posted by on Mar 31, 2015 in Blog |

  On March 10th, CTV reported that elevated levels of trichloroethene (TCE) were found in groundwater along Brydges Street in London, Ontario.  It is not currently known if there is any immediate health risk to the local community.  As we understand, indoor air will be tested to assess the potential for vapour intrusion in homes (read more about vapour intrusion). The current London issue aside, TCE has been amongst the most common chemical contaminants in soil and...

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Protecting the Great Lakes – Will This Act Help?

Posted by on Mar 18, 2015 in Blog |

  It’s back. The “it” is the Great Lakes Protection Act, and, in February 2015, the Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change announced that the Act had been reintroduced. For those of you who have been following this issue, you know that the bill was first introduced in June 2012, but it didn’t get much traction. So what’s changed? And why is this legislation again being considered? If I were to speculate, based on recent environmental news stories, I would say that...

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Keystone XL Pipeline – Good for the Environment?

Posted by on Feb 19, 2015 in Blog |

  The recent train derailment in West Virginia that was, reportedly, carrying Bakken crude from North Dakota’s shale fields may very well put the Tar Sands and the Keystone XL Pipeline … and the politics thereof … back into the top of the news cycle. It was just last month The Globe and Mail reported that the current US Legislative “revolt” over the Keystone XL Pipeline is just a delay and that, “The revolt will likely be a temporary setback to the legislation.”  In other...

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