Henry Coe and DUMP receive MCI Award

July 21, 2025

Henry Coe and DUMP honored with prestigious Gordon-Kohl award.

During its 58th annual general meeting held on Saturday, June 19th at the Magog Community Centre, Memphremagog Conservation (MCI) made a heartfelt call for citizens to get involved in the preservation of Lake Memphremagog and its watershed. Johanne Lavoie, the organization's volunteer president, emphasized: 'Every action counts to protect this natural treasure , threatened by the loss of natural habitats and the effects of climate change. Together, we can act for future generations!'


Ms. Lavoie emphasized, 'You also have a key role to play in preserving this essential drinking water reservoir and its unique ecosystems. Together, we can ensure the future of Lake Memphremagog and its surroundings for generations to come.”

 

A special presentation on the Coventry NEWSVT landfill site was featured, highlighting the fifth anniversary of the moratorium on the discharge of Coventry NEWSVT landfill leachate into Lake Memphremagog, the drinking water reservoir for nearly 185,000 Canadians. Millions of gallons of leachate from the Coventry  NEWSVT landfill, containing thousands of contaminants, including “forever” PFAS chemicals, were discharged into the Newport wastewater treatment facility on Lake Memphremagog between 2010 and 2019, when the moratorium was imposed . Thanks to a battle worthy of David and Goliath, led by the grassroots environmental organization, Don’t Undermine Memphremagog’s Purity, or DUMP, the moratorium has prevented the disposal of millions more gallons of leachate into the lake or watershed ever since.


MCI granted the prestigious 2025 MCI Gordon-Kohl Award to Mr. Henry Coe, founder of DUMP , honored for his unwavering commitment to the protection of Lake Memphremagog. Alarmed by the potential environmental impact of the Coventry landfill, he mobilized against its expansion in 2018, contacting Mr. Robert Benoit of MCI, which led to the creation of the DUMP organization. DUMP engaged in mediation with the NEWSVT landfill, securing the historic moratorium on the discharge of leachate into the Lake Memphremagog watershed.


DUMP, together with MCI, will continue the fight for environmental protection and environmental justice for the Memphremagog region. “A permanent ban on disposal of landfill leachate anywhere in the Memphremagog watershed is our common goal”, declared Mr. Coe. “Protecting the drinking water reservoir of our Quebec neighbors, and the ecosystem we all depend upon, is our priority.”


Quebec’s MCI and their American partner, DUMP, are not letting up on their efforts to protect international Lake Memphremagog. There are still many issues related to water quality, given the presence of Vermont’s only landfill, so poorly sited near the Black River and South Bay of Lake Memphremagog. The threat posed by the experimental leachate pretreatment pilot project on site in Coventry is a current focus of concern.

MCI was honored by the presence of the federal members of Parliament, Mr. Louis Villeneuve and Mrs. Marianne Dandurand, and Sherbrooke counsellors, Annie Godbout and Christelle Lefèvre. No doubt this international environmental issue caught their attention.







In the photo, among those present were Johanne Lavoie, president of the MCI organization (5th from left), Teresa Gerade, member of the DUMP organization (middle row, 4th from right); and Peggy Stevens, Chris Jacobs, Henry Coe, recipient of the Gordon-Kohl Award, and Effie Brown, all members of the DUMP organization (extreme right).


Source Johanne Lavoie, MCI volunteer president

 819-238-3895 Email: johanne.lavoie@memphremagog.org

Submitted with MCI permission by Peggy Stevens

802-723-5951 pegnericstevens@gmail.com


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On May 31 the Department of Environmental Conservation Watershed Management Division issued the final amended Permit for the pilot leachate pretreatment system on site at the NEWSVT Coventry landfill. The pretreatment system is supposed to filter toxic PFAS chemicals from the 60,000 gallons a day of leachate produced by the landfill. “Forever” PFAS chemicals , found in leachate and toxic even in minute amounts, are known to contaminate the environment and cause serious health effects, including cancer, in humans. Many doubts exist about the safety and effectiveness of the relatively new SAFF technology chosen by NEWSVT. At a December 12, 2023 public meeting in Newport, many concerns from the public were raised about the chosen leachate pretreatment technology, including that only five- out of the existing 15,000 PFAS chemicals- would be required to be filtered to “non-detect” levels. “Non-detect” amounts of PFAS chemicals are not safe levels. Research has proved that many of the thousands of other PFAS compounds will escape filtration entirely due to their microscopic size, will enter the environment, accumulate over time, and cause harm to humans and wildlife that drink or eat PFAS contaminated water and food. Now the pilot leachate pretreatment permit has been issued, with some very sketchy language that creates loopholes big enough to drive an MBI truck through once the pilot ends. These loopholes: 1) Would open the door to making the pilot leachate pretreatment facility a permanent installation on the landfill, without any opportunity for public review or comment once the180-day pilot ends; 2) Could allow for the resumption of the disposal of “treated” leachate into international Lake Memphremagog, a drinking water reservoir for 175,000 Quebec citizens; 3) Could allow for the import of thousands of gallons a day of leachate from other landfills; 4) Would establish performance standards that may not be as strict as results other available leachate pretreatment technologies provide; 5) Allow for the return to operating leachate pretreatment 24/7 without full time staffing, as occurred in February, 2024 with the accidental spill of nearly 9,000 gallons of leachate. Prior to 2019, over 41 million gallons of toxic leachate were disposed of into Newport’s Waste Water Treatment Facility, unfiltered for PFAS. The 2019 moratorium imposed by Act 250 forbids treatment or disposal of landfill leachate anywhere in the Memphremagog watershed. The moratorium, designed to protect Memphremagog’s water quality from further contamination, now it is at risk of being sidestepped. The citizens of the Lake Memphremagog region need to come together to say “No” to permanent siting of this leachate treatment pilot in Coventry, “No” to returning to leachate disposal into the watershed, “No” to contaminating the drinking water reservoir of 175,000 Quebec citizens, “No” to polluting our recreational waters, our wildlife habitat, the foundations of our regional tourist economy, “No” to eroding our property values and tax base. Yes, leachate must be filtered for toxic landfill contaminants including PFAS, but only with the safest and most effective technologies and not in the Memphremagog watershed, ever.