EJQ6 - Fall 2025 - Journal - Page 10
He highlighted how an intuitive system can make environmental
compliance easier, unlock commercial value, reduce delays, limit risk,
and give project teams immediate visibility into their soil movements.
From large-scale transit projects in Toronto and abroad to growing
adoption across Western Canada, and around the world, digital
e昀케ciencies are providing transparency and practical soil tracking.
Lack of consistency in the sandbox
Moderator Connie Vitello, Editor of Environment Journal, kicked o昀昀
the questions by discussing the new soil reuse guidelines outlined by
the Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment and inquiring
about the impacts of changes to the
contaminated sites regulation (CSR)
in B.C. and Alberta’s waste control
regulation.
“In terms of the expansion of the
various regulations and policies, it’s all
being informed by new information,
new science, new research, and it will
THE COMPLETE CONVERSATION:
EXCESS SOILS WEST WEBINAR
E N V I RON M E N T J OURN A L QUA RT E RLY RE PORT • FA L L 2 02 5 • P AGE 1 0