Charges laid against George Weston Foods Ltd by the Environment Protection Authority Victoria have resulted in a $100,000 boost for a local conservation group.
EPA charged the company after a spill allowed untreated wastewater to flow into a nearby creek on February 19, 2019, at the company’s Don KR Castlemaine facility.
The company told EPA that the discharge of wastewater occurred because there was a failure with their trade waste pumps and associated alarm system, causing a trade waste pit to overflow into stormwater and run undetected into the creek.
George Weston Foods Ltd pleaded guilty in the Castlemaine Magistrates Court on July 30, to two charges of polluting waters of an unnamed tributary of Campbells Creek and for breaching an EPA licence condition.
The company was convicted and ordered to pay $100,000 to the Mount Alexander Sustainability Group Inc to support the Mount Alexander Regenerative Agriculture Program.
The program is working to increase awareness and adoption of land management practices that improve and protect the condition of soil, biodiversity and vegetation (among other agricultural pursuits).
George Weston Foods Ltd was ordered to publicise its offending in the Midland Express, Bendigo Advertiser and Castlemaine Mail newspapers and pay EPA’s costs of $10,000.
The company has also been placed on a two-year undertaking to be of good behaviour.
Contaminated water was removed from the creek as part of the clean-up operation, and George Weston Foods Ltd has since made modifications to the premises to prevent any future spills.