Halifax residents living in the vicinity of the sewage pumping station at Inglis and Barrington Streets are complaining of a foul sewage smell in their neighbourhood. Thursday evening, the odour was so strong that I could smell it two- to three blocks away, and while driving by in an air conditioned car.
Some months ago, Halifax Water manager Carl Yates told me that there were design errors related to the pumping station but, citing pending small claims suits from residents of a nearby apartment building who had their cars flooded with sewage, Yates would not disclose what those errors are.
A well-placed source, who is granted anonymity because he or she isn’t authorized to speak, tells me that the design error is related to the pipe that discharges from the pumping station to the harbour—that is, to the “combined sewage outfall” portion of the station.
Properly designed, the pumping station is supposed to divert sewage from the south end into a huge pipe that stretches under downtown and leads to the sewage plant on Barrington Street, behind the casino. But because the sewage lines handle both sanitary (toilet) water and storm water, and because the pipe can handle only four times the “dry weather” flow, when it rains the overflow sewage is screened and pumped directly into the harbour.
My source tells me that this pipe is too small in diameter, which is what causes the back-up of sewage out of the station and into the basements of nearby apartment buildings. More, there is a one-way valve at the end of the pipe, which was probably intended to keep storm surges from backing up through the station, but which in dry weather times prevents harbour water from flushing out the smelly pipe. That’s what’s happening now, says my source.
I put all this to Halifax Water, and received the following response via email from spokesperson James Campbell:
Halifax Water currently has crews in the Barrington/Inglis St. area pumping out sewer lines that are believed to be the source of the odour. It is thought the odour is related to low flows in the lines over the last number of weeks due to the lack of rainfall. Last weekends rain would have moved some of the material along, but Halifax Water crews are checking to see if more material is still resting in the pipes and will try and remove the material with vacuum trucks.
I’ll take that as a confirmation.
This article appears in Sep 9-15, 2010.



The Poop Haus! Finally some attention being brought to this facade.
Well done, Tim!
HA! You think this is bad..The area in the main part of Dartmouth around Tim Hortons and the Funeral Parlour on Portland has had THAT problem and worse for years..unbelievable!!!! Not nice..especially when you think of the combination…I can’t imagine that Timmy’s has not lost some of its customers due to the fragrance???
I can just imagine the outcry if this had been a P3 project. CUPE and others would be all over it complaining about private profit is bad and public efforts are good.
Why is CUPE so silent about this shit fest ?
Where is Maude Barlow and her Council of Lefty Canadians ?
When will the Raging Grannies be warbling outside the library ?
Silence is golden, shit is …well, just shit.
Somebody needs to be strung up and I suggest we start looking at City Hall.
I work in the Film + Media Centre building way down by Pier 21. I can smell raw sewage frequently, from the back of the building and now I know why. When you look it up on a map, the back entrance of the building lies diagonally directly across from that area. So, not only does the South End smell like shit, but the Port area does too. Thanks, Waste Management.
Hi,
is this area still smelling after treatment has been started???