![Why dangerous chemicals from the U of A needed to be detonated at Hawrelak Park](https://globalnews.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Oral-health-lab.jpg?quality=85&strip=all&w=720&h=379&crop=1)
Why dangerous chemicals from the U of A needed to be detonated at Hawrelak Park
Global News
Early in the morning on Nov. 27, a convoy of Edmonton police, EMS and fire vehicles made its way from the University of Alberta to Hawrelak Park with dangerous chemicals on board.
Early in the morning on Nov. 27, a convoy of Edmonton police, EMS and fire vehicles made its way from the University of Alberta to Hawrelak Park with dangerous chemicals on board.
The Edmonton Police Service had sent out a notice to residents that it was helping with a planned and controlled chemical transport and disposal from the U of A to Hawrelak Park and that residents might hear a “loud bang.”
That notice led to many questions being raised by residents.
“The park was identified as the closest, large enough place that they could work safely,” Michelle Rooker, manager of inspections and technical services with the U of A’s Human Resources, Health, Safety and Environment said.
In an interview on Dec. 15 to explain what happened that day, Rooker said that once or twice a year, the U of A engages with police to dispose or detonate chemicals.
“Occasionally we do come across chemicals that either through their age, or other things that have happened, they become unstable. So at that point in time, they don’t qualify for our regular waste streams,” Rooker said.
Typically, the detonations are done on campus, but in this case, a large area was needed, Rooker said.