Item - 2018.PW31.2
Tracking Status
- This item was considered by Public Works and Infrastructure Committee on July 10, 2018 and was adopted without amendment.
PW31.2 - Sewers and Water Supply By-laws 2017 Compliance and Enforcement Annual Report
- Decision Type:
- ACTION
- Status:
- Adopted
- Wards:
- All
Committee Decision
The Public Works and Infrastructure Committee:
1. Received the report (June 22, 2018) from the Acting General Manager, Toronto Water for information.
Origin
Summary
This report provides a summary of the activities performed in 2017 by Toronto Water's Environmental Monitoring and Protection Unit, which is responsible for administrative compliance and enforcement of the City of Toronto's Sewers and Water Supply By-laws (Municipal Code Chapter 681 – Sewers and Municipal Code Chapter 851-Water Supply, respectively).
In 2017, the Environmental Monitoring and Protection Unit performed 4,570 tasks, such as company inspections, dye tests, meetings with businesses, storm sewer outfall inspections under the Sewers By-law and 412 inspections under the Water Supply By-law. The staff performed 3,401 sampling events, which resulted in 28,891 laboratory analyses. A total of 859 Notices of Violation were issued for non-compliance under the Sewers By-law and 15 issued for non-compliance under Water Supply By-law.
In 2017, cases involving 69 companies and 1 individual moved forward to prosecution for both the Sewers and Water Supply By-laws. Under the Sewers By-law, there were 30 convictions resulting in $305,000 in fines and under the Water Supply By-law, 6 convictions resulting in $43,500 in fines, totalling 36 convictions with $348,500 in fines for 2017 (convictions may include prosecution files started in previous years). This total does not include the Victim Fine Surcharge (which is collected and retained by the Ontario Provincial Government for victims of crime – for fines over $1,000; the surcharge is 25 percent of the fine). The remaining prosecution files are still before the courts.
The number of Industrial Waste Surcharge Agreements entered into with businesses increased in 2017 and the total cost recovery for Toronto Water under this program was $13.2 million. Similarly, the total number of Sanitary Discharge Agreements increased, and there was a total cost recovery of $4.2 million.
In 2017, the Outfall Monitoring Program identified 33 new cross connections (arising from sanitary wastewater misdirected to a storm sewer) and verified the correction of 53 cross connections (some were carried over from previous years). Eight (8) Priority Outfalls within Toronto's watersheds were delisted, thereby seeing an improvement in water quality at those outfalls and receiving waters.
Background Information
https://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2018/pw/bgrd/backgroundfile-117623.pdf