Soil spills | Nexus sends formal notice to Oka

Nexus Construction sent a formal notice to the municipality of Oka and its mayor accusing them of having made defamatory remarks by asserting that the Laval company “poured [des sols] in the Lac des Deux-Montagnes. The city persists and signs: it does not intend to retract, maintaining that it is within its rights to denounce the comings and goings of trucks passing through its territory to dispose of land in Kanesatake.


Posted at 6:14 p.m.

In a formal notice sent last Thursday, Nexus Construction accuses the municipality of Oka and its mayor, Pascal Quevillon, of having broadcast “false and unfounded comments” on social networks, maintaining that Nexus has “poured into the lake of Deux-Montagnes.

The company is particularly targeting a photo that the mayor of Oka posted on Facebook on June 4. We see a truck bearing the Nexus logo dumping the contents of its skip near the watercourse. The image is accompanied by the following statement: “The Nexus company dumping into Lac des Deux-Montagnes in Kanesatake, no less. Where are our governments for indigenous communities? “.

Read our article “Soil spills cause serious tensions in Kanesatake”

These comments “are not only false, unjustified, baseless and defamatory, but also constitute a direct, unlawful, intentional and harmful violation of the law [de Nexus] to safeguard its honor, its integrity and its good reputation,” said Nexus, in the formal notice.

This was tabled during an extraordinary meeting of the Oka municipal council on Monday. The company led by the brothers Romeo and Antonio and Sacchetti “immediately” demands a public apology from the municipality and the deletion of Mayor Quevillon’s publication.

However, Oka does not intend to retract. In a response sent to the company this Monday, the municipality’s lawyer asserts that with this approach, Nexus “clearly seeks to restrict the rights to freedom of expression” of the municipality and the mayor.

The latter “in no way crossed the line separating opinion versus damage to reputation,” they write. The image posted on Facebook “clearly demonstrates the illegal dumping in Lac des Deux-Montagnes”.

In the event of a lawsuit, Oka intends to defend itself: “We will raise an abuse of process and we will reserve the possibility of claiming compensatory and punitive damages against” Nexus.

This is the second formal notice in this case related to the disposal of land in Mohawk territory. On May 14, the Kanesatake Band Council sent a letter to Nexus to force a stop to work on its territory, revealed The Press. “If you believe, or have been advised, that this is a lawless area, you are mistaken,” the document reads.

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PHOTO FRANÇOIS ROY, THE PRESS

The Kanesatake Band Council asked Nexus Construction to stop dumping soil on its territory.

The Council reminds “that federal environmental laws apply, as do provincial environmental laws”. If Nexus does not “immediately stop all dumping on the Mohawk territory of Kanesatake”, legal action will be taken, writes the Band Council.

“Despite attempts by Council members to block the access of these trucks to Mohawk territory, your company’s drivers continued to arrive and treat Kanesatake as an unregulated dumping site,” it is written.

After questions that The Press sent to Nexus about its activities in Kanesatake, the public relations firm National forwarded to The Press answers on behalf of the company. The company says it is only responsible for the soil transportation aspect and assures that it “has never dumped soil into the Ottawa River at any time.” It ensures “to maintain a buffer strip between natural environments and the disposal site” and reiterates that its “commitment to environmental protection remains unshakeable”.

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