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Not me

Posted: July 19, 2023 at 10:01 am   /   by   /   comments (3)

The facts, as we know them, are these. Wellington’s water is Wellington on the Lake’s water. It is drawn from Lake Ontario, stored in the water tower, and distributed to all Wellington residents. One water source. Wellington on the Lake owns and manages the pipes that distribute the municipal water through the subdivision.

This is what happened last week: An inspection of the water at Wellington on the Lake on Tuesday found coliform (a bacteria) present in the sample. According to Health Canada, no amount of coliform (typically found in human or animal waste) in water is safe. The private testing firm proceeded to advise residents in the subdivision to boil their water.

Then an odd thing happened. On Thursday, Shire Hall learned that someone was going door-to-door urging residents not to drink the water. The County issued a public service announcement warning residents of a scam, assuring them that their water was safe to drink.

Later in the day, however, Shire Hall walked back the scam assertion. The municipality acknowledged that there was contamination in the Wellington on the Lake sample—residents should boil their water after all. The notice added, however, that Wellington water—save for Wellington on the Lake—remained safe to drink.

On Monday, the County lifted the boil water advisory for the residents of Wellington on the Lake.

Yet, residents had questions: How did Shire Hall know that the water was safe in the village but not in Wellington on the Lake? The subdivision’s water source is the same as the rest of the village. How could they be confident it was safe? It wasn’t until midday Friday that the Times learned the answer.

The water had been tested at the municipal source on the day of the contaminated sample at Wellington on the Lake and found to be clean. Whatever was wrong with the water in the subdivision was the result of something downstream, not the source. But why only in Wellington on the Lake? It turns out there had been excavation near the sampling site earlier in the week, likely exposing water to the harmful bacteria from that point onward.
In the intervening hours and days, residents were confused, anxious for their health and frustrated by conflicting information. Wellington on the Lake is a community composed mostly of seniors—the folks most vulnerable to the risks of contaminated water.

So, what should we make of this episode? Let’s start by acknowledging that bad things happen. When operating a system as complex and varied as the County’s waterworks, shit does happen.

The important bit is how we respond. What can we learn, and how can we adapt to ensure the same things don’t keep happening?

We know there was a full-on breakdown in communication throughout the organization— on the operations level, admin, and governance. We know the water inspection folks and the County were saying different things simultaneously. We learned that the various parts of the Wellington water system didn’t coordinate or share information effectively. We know that critical hours slipped by, adding to the confusion and anxiety experienced by users. We learned the system is composed of many parts, and when things go wrong, fingers are pointed quickly—in every direction—long before solutions are sought.

But here is the thing: We need an investigation to find out what went wrong. Where did communication break down? And why? More questions: Shouldn’t the municipality oversee inspections of this distribution system? Are they curious about how that system is faring? Do they share information at all? It seems symptomatic of an environment where there is shared responsibility but isolated jurisdiction. It is the gap that responsibility disappears.

Is it tenable and reasonable for the several hundred residents in this subdivision to manage their own distribution system? Do they know the safety of municipal water is only assured at the edge of their community?

But who will ask these questions? Who will demand answers? Will it be Council? Maybe. But is it more likely this is all forgotten in a couple of weeks? That this story will fade from its consciousness?

The solution is as obvious as it is repetitive: Waterworks customers must push for a permanent commission comprised exclusively of residents—direct stakeholders—and staff to govern this utility, to look out for its interests. To provide explanations when things go wrong. It is not unique or even rare. Waterworks commissions exist all over the world to do this job—to oversee critical and complex infrastructure.

Most of Council—currently governing this utility— are not customers. It doesn’t make them uncaring or unhelpful people—but their interests don’t align with the folks who fund the system. Or those who rely on it.

Let the message from this episode be a demand for proper accountability for the water we rely on.

rick@wellingtontimes.ca

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  • July 27, 2023 at 7:51 am SM

    I don’t know where you got the idea that there was some sort of excavation that caused the bad water sample. I understand the sample was taken at the WOTL recreation centre and that sample only was tainted. I do not know of any excavation that took place anywhere in WOTL let alone near the rec. centre. As well there are closer to 1000 people living in WOTL. The water supply system, sewage, roads, parks, rec. centre are all owned by the developer(s) of WOTL and they have been testing the water twice weekly since WOTL began. What appears to have happened is one faulty test. The Health Unit had no choice but to issue the Boil Water Advisory. After that the County, based upon unverified information issued a news release that there was a scam in WOTL. That faulty information was not fully replaced with the correct information until the following day. The ‘bad’ test was taken on July 11 and the results were not available until July 13. The Health Unit did not post the BWA until approximately 10:30 am July 14. The Health Unit, not the County lifted the BWA on July 17 after two clear tests were taken. The developer(s) of WOTL have been responsible for the WOTL water system since the 1990’s and by all accounts have done so responsibly for 30 some years. WOTL residents DO NOT operate the system. Although inconvenient, the BWA was not the problem in this case. The REAL problem was the faulty, unverified news release that created confusion in the community. If the water had been contaminated that Scam warning meant that people were exposed to a health risk for longer than they should have. You have been advocating for a Water Works Commission for some time and I have no issue with that. Such a body would still have no control over the WOTL system as it is privately owned. WOTL’s relationship is like that of Consecon. The water is provided by another body. The County does not control the operation of Trenton’s system and Trenton does not control the operation of the County’s system. If you think the County should control WOTL’s water system then the County will have to purchase it and while they are at it they may as well purchase the roads in WOTL and take over the snow removal and trash collection at the same time.

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    • July 27, 2023 at 10:07 am Rick Conroy

      You are right. I should not have included that speculation in my comment. And you are right a waterworks commission won’t have powers over private and/or contracted water systems. I contend, however, a dedicated commission would gather a better fact base, consider the efficacy, reliability and prospects of dependent systems and generally be more responsive to the customers/stakeholders.

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  • July 24, 2023 at 6:37 pm Wayne Crann

    Well stated Rick, I agree with you completely. We need to have the waterworks situation sorted out including management and future growth in sound hands that have a vested interest not just by people sitting around the table that do not share the burden of costs.

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