
Thousands of tonnes of contaminated soil will need to be removed before a small portion of Shannon Park can be turned over to the Millbrook First Nation.
But how much and how long it will take to clean up the rest of Shannon Park—a parcel of land almost 10 times the size of the Millbrook property and being looked at for potential redevelopment as a CFL stadium—remains to be seen.
A federal tender issued last week says the winning bid on the smaller Millbrook site will need to excavate, transport and dispose of some 24,000 tonnes of impacted soil from the 10-acre peninsula in Dartmouth.
The remediation work is expected to be completed by next spring and could cost the federal government upwards of $5 million.
Constructed in 1949, Shannon Park served as a housing complex for military families until 2003. Canada Lands Company, the federal government’s real estate and redevelopment corporation, acquired 96.5 acres of the former DND lands in 2014.
In that same year, DND transferred just over 10 acres of the site to Indigenous Services Canada to use as an “administrative remedy” for a land claim Millbrook had made on property in Sheet Harbour.
According to Martine Stevens, spokesperson for Indigenous Services Canada, the government has been working closely with the Millbrook First Nation on the project and the band council is fully aware of remediation plans.
“It is expected that remediation will include digging and disposal of contaminated soil and debris at an appropriate waste disposal facility,” Stevens writes in an email to The Coast. “The excavated areas will be backfilled with uncontaminated soil. Key to the project will be testing of the soil throughout the project to ensure the contamination is fully addressed.”

The lands of Shannon Park have long served as a Mi’kmaq community known as Turtle Grove. Most of the area’s Indigenous inhabitants permanently moved away after the devastation of the Halifax Explosion in 1917 and subsequent pressure from neighbouring white landowners to redevelop the property.
The site’s long history of various uses since that time makes it more than a little difficult to pinpoint the exact cause of the contamination.
Environmental site assessments conducted by ISC found the soil and groundwater contains hydrocarbons, benzenes, toluene and other contaminants “in excess of environmental guidelines.”
The impacted areas are limited to a former railway, rail bed, wharf and parking lot. There’s also a small concentration of lead in the area as a result of “painting activities” from Nova Scotia Power’s nearby electrical tower.
“Nova Scotia Power is aware of the contamination and is responsible for this portion of the remediation,” writes Stevens.
The spokesperson says ISC estimates the contamination originates from when Shannon Park was an active DND community, but that some of the pollution could stretch as far back as the late 1890s.
The soil contamination has no connection to the neighbouring Tufts Cove power plant, says ISC, nor did this past August’s oil spill at the plant impact the Millbrook lands.
Meanwhile, environmental assessments and remediation for the remaining 96 acres of Shannon Park will need to be conducted by Canada Lands before any redevelopment can happen.
It’s unclear whether the proposed football stadium that Maritime Football Limited Partnership wants to build on the property in time for a 2021 CFL season will hasten those timelines.
“As part of the planning process we have investigated the environmental characteristics of the property,” CLC spokesperson Manon Lapensée writes via email. “Cost related to preparing the site for redevelopment are Canada Lands’ responsibility and will be in compliance with all related regulations when the time comes.”
An Access to Information request made by The Coast this past summer asked CLC for all presentations, reports and analyses regarding the contamination of lands at Shannon Park over the past 18 years. The query resulted in 6,152 pages of relevant files.
No documents were released, however. Their publication “could reasonably be expected to be materially injurious to the financial interests of Canada Lands Company Limited.”
This article appears in Nov 8-14, 2018.


That price tag is not surprising. The Feds left the property in a bit of a mess. And since the Crown made the mess, are the ones financially responsible to clean it up meaning that nether the city north apartments will incur any cost.
Whether it’s a Stadium or Park land or a hipster colony, the property has to be cleaned up. We knew this before they tore down Shannon Park. We knew this when they were tearing it down. We knew this when they finished tearing it all down.
My question? Where’s the beef?
Jacob Boon has achieved a new level of Eurocentric journalism coupled with the use of understatement in the way he writes about the relationship of the Mi’kmaq and “the lands of Shannon Park”. I am dumbstruck still by this sentence: “Most of the area’s indigenous inhabitants permanently moved away after the devastation of the Halifax Explosion in 1917”. Can he be ignorant of the fact that most of the inhabitants of Turtle Grove — a seasonal home to about 20 Mikmaq families, seven wigwams, and a school — were killed when the tsunami resulting from the collision swept away the settlement? that the survivors were ignored in the aftermath of the disaster? that while north end Halifax was rebuilt, Turtle Grove was abandoned and the school was never rebuilt? that the European settlers didn’t want those families as neighbours? Boon makes it sound like it was the choice of the survivors to ‘move away’. As for those who died in the explosion’s aftermath, Boon is right that their move away was indeed permanent.