B.C. politicians ask for audit of wastewater treatment plant
North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant cost has ballooned nearly 450% and been delayed by a decade
A group of local politicians from B.C.'s Lower Mainland is asking the provincial auditor general to investigate how the cost of a wastewater treatment plant could balloon to $3.86 billion.
Seven local city councillors from five jurisdictions said in a statement they are urging Michael Pickup to look into the delays and cost overruns, saying he has the jurisdiction because the province put $200 million toward the project.
The original cost of the North Shore Wastewater Treatment Plant was $700 million in 2018, and it was expected to open in 2020, but the Metro Vancouver regional district fired the contractor in 2021 over construction delays.
Surrey Coun. Linda Annis, one of those asking for the audit, says the megaproject's mismanagement is staggering, and Metro Vancouver taxpayers deserve to know how it went wrong and why they are stuck with the bill for the next 30 years.
Burnaby Coun. Richard T. Lee says there hasn't been any accountability for the nearly 450 per-cent cost increase from the original budget.
A statement from the auditor's office says it did receive the request, and because there is provincial involvement, it would be something the office could look into, but its policy is not to discuss work under consideration for an audit.
Corrections
- A previous version of this story identified Richard T. Lee as a Richmond, B.C. councillor. He is, in fact, a councillor in Burnaby.Jun 14, 2024 9:25 AM PT