Not really an overstatement when it was brought up in the past in planning reports, for
example.
Page 9:
Then there is this
diagram that shows the existing row - in the fine print, there are six operational pipelines at the time of the map that bisect the hospital land, plus the north/south ATCO pipeline to the east.
Again, it was not really an overstatement when it took me 10 minutes of googling to see the inherent issues that would need to be considered during design. Sure, they will probably figure it out, but how much extra time and cost does that add to the project? I would argue significant scope creep. You can see the pipeline row on google maps using the terrain view that extends southeast and northeast of the project site. The lines will likely need to be relocated AND upgraded to class 4 lines. Meaningful work has yet to begin on infrastructure relocation.
Yes, the project will likely proceed, but when will it open for service to the public when the healthcare system in Edmonton has already stretched to its limits 10 years ago? Another 10 years from now? 15? I would argue we are well within our rights to point out the poor planning and lack of due diligence that was done in choosing this site. Sorry, but when I read articles about people waiting over 24 hours in an emergency room, I think I should be able to say that our government isn't doing a very good job at fixing the problem.