37-1
37th Parliament,
1st Session
(January 29, 2001 - September 16, 2002)
Select a different session
Proceedings of the Standing Senate Committee on
Energy, the Environment and Natural Resources
Issue 16 - Evidence, October 23, 2001
| OTTAWA, Tuesday, October 23, 2001
|
| The Standing Senate Committee on Energy, the Environment
and Natural Resources, to which was referred Bill S-18, to amend
the Food and Drugs Act (clean drinking water), met this day at
5:35 p.m. to give consideration to the bill.
|
| Senator Nicholas W. Taylor (Chairman) in the Chair.
|
| [English]
|
| The Chairman: Honourable senators, we have a quorum. We
welcome our witnesses this evening on Bill S-18. Please proceed.
|
| Mr. Ron Patterson, President, Canadian Water and
Wastewater Association: Honourable senators, thank you for this
opportunity. After our oral presentation today, we intend to table a
detailed written presentation in a few days' time.
|
| I am the town engineer for the town of Amherst, Nova Scotia, a
town of 10,000. I have spent considerable years managing the
water and wastewater utilities in our region. I am the Nova Scotia
representative as well as the President of the Canadian Water and
Wastewater Association.
|
| With me is Mr. André Proulx who is also an engineer
specializing in drinking water systems. He is the Second Vice
President of our association and represents the Ontario
Waterworks Association on our board. Mr. Proulx has had an
equally long career in drinking water systems. He now works for
Delcan Corporation, a Canadian-owned consulting firm with more
than 500 employees.
|
| Also with me is Mr. Ian Douglas, a water-quality engineer and
the Manager of the City of Ottawa's water-treatment facilities. He
is Chair of the Canadian Water and Wastewater Association water
quality committee.
|
| Mr. Duncan Ellison is here as the Executive Director of the
Canadian Water and Wastewater Association and a former federal
public civil servant who has had a distinguished career in several
departments including Health Canada and Environment Canada as
a specialist in environmental health risk assessment and
management.
|
| The Canadian Water and Wastewater Association is the
national voice of the municipal water and wastewater sector,
providing municipal liaison services and channels to the federal
and national bodies whose legislation, policy and programs
impact on the provision of municipal water and wastewater
services in Canada.
|
| This association has the additional functions of ensuring that
there is a pan-Canadian flow of information, that the national
standards of excellence are implemented, and that we maintain a
current professional contact with counterpart associations in other
countries including the U.S.A.
|
| Our board of directors reflects our provincial-territorial
diversity and includes representatives from the seven regional
associations of professional and technical people who provide
municipal water and wastewater services in Canada.
|
| The matter of water regulation in Canada and the role that the
federal government can and should play is very complex. We will
forward to you a written brief on our presentation for future
consideration. Should you wish, after review of that written brief,
we will be prepared to meet with you at your convenience to
discuss any issues that might arise.
|
| The assurance of safe drinking water supplies for Canadians is
now achieved through a multifaceted interrelated process
involving legislation and programs at both federal and
provincial-territorial levels, and the professional activities and
investments of the municipalities across Canada with their
private-sector partners. The process has been developed, modified
and refined over the years.
|
| The objectives of municipal water supply systems are to
provide safe and healthy water on a continuous basis to all of our
customers as well as meeting fire protection needs.
|
| The municipal water sector in consort with its regulatory
community are continuously reviewing current practices, looking
for improvements and are investing in enhanced treatment
facilities. There are more than 3,000 public water systems serving
more than 24,000 Canadians.
|
| The Chairman: I apologize for interrupting. Does your
association represent a certain percentage of those 3,000 water
systems? How many of these public water systems are in your
association?
|
| Mr. Patterson: We have a membership in the order of
180 utilities. Many of the 3,000 utilities listed are very small and
we do not represent them all. We represent in the order of
180 municipal utilities. I would correct the fact that there are
24 million Canadians.
|
| In addition to our direct membership, there are seven regional
associations including the Atlantic Canada Waterworks
Association, RÉSEAU environnement in Quebec, the Ontario
Waterworks Association, the Western Canada Waterworks
Association, the British Columbia Waterworks Association, and
the Northern Territories Water and Waste Water Association.
Those associations are members of Canadian Water and
Wastewater Association, or CWWA. Their total membership
would represent a very high percentage of those 3,000 utilities.
|
| The Chairman: I wanted to know how powerful a group you
are.
|
| Mr. Patterson: We can stand up and say that we represent
those utilities, but I cannot say that they all pay membership dues
to us.
|
| Unfortunately, from time to time, a water-related health
incident will occur, as they will in other sectors such as food,
occupational health and safety. These incidents occur for reasons
not necessarily related to the overall governing structure. From
these incidents, lessons are learned and the process and
requirements are adjusted to prevent any reoccurrence.
|
| Walkerton triggered that process, and reviews and
modifications are now being undertaken in Ontario and
elsewhere. The federal government and the provinces and
territories are now examining their regulatory schemes.
Municipalities are looking at their operations. All levels of
government and the stakeholders are also reviewing the overall
water management framework as it affects the supply of potable
water for Canadians.
|
| From these incidents and a continuous improvement approach,
improvements have been identified and implemented. Others are
being proposed or planned, not just in Ontario, but across the
country.
|
| Senator Grafstein is to be congratulated on his initiative that
provides an alternative to the current federal-provincial territorial
legislative framework. Proposing to regulate drinking water
quality through the Food and Drugs Act as a food provides an
interesting and feasible alternative as the need to control the
presence of additives and contaminants in food is quite analogous
to the presence of additives and contaminants in water.
|
| Such alternatives should always be examined to determine if
the present regulatory scheme is the most efficient and effective.
|
| Bill S-18, if enacted, would significantly change the current
long-developed and well-refined framework within which
municipalities act to provide safe drinking water. The likely
consequences of Bill S-18, with its potential for new and different
inspection programs, is the creation of uncertainties and probable
duplication of effort with existing provincial and territorial
responsibilities.
|
| This could be confusing and disruptive if it resulted in a second
set of regulations to be adhered to by our municipalities.
Regulatory overlap is not something that CWWA supports.
|
| The Senate should note the current initiative to review and
reformulate the overall water management framework being
developed through federal, provincial and territorial discussions
that will involve all stakeholders including the municipalities.
This is taking place through the Canadian Council of Ministers of
Environment and its water planning committee.
|
| The framework is to manage the quality of water from the
environment to the tap, and back to the environment in a
harmonious and integrated manner.
|
| Participating in this process is the federal-provincial territorial
subcommittee on drinking water that reports to the
multi-jurisdictional committee on environmental and occupational
health.
|
| Canadian Water and Wastewater Association looks forward to
the completion of the current review of activities under CCME
that is examining the water management framework.
|
| The Canadian Water and Wastewater Association, representing
the municipal agencies directly responsible for the delivery of
safe drinking water in Canadian cities and towns, believes that
adequate and specific adjustments are being made to the current
legislative framework to meet the needs of Canadians and sees no
benefit to the enactment of the proposed amendment to the Food
and Drugs Act as represented by Bill S-18.
|
| Canadian Water and Wastewater Association does, however,
urge the Government of Canada to examine and strengthen its
role in the assurance of safe drinking water within its existing
legislative and constitutional powers, and to seek other
non-duplicative ways to provide support to the current programs
and activities in this sector.
|
| I will make the following suggestions of ways this can be
accomplished: first, strengthening the research into the health
effect of contaminants and additives in drinking water; second,
strengthening research and optimizing existing and new treatment
technologies to reduce the presence of additives and contaminants
to appropriate levels; third, facilitating investment in new or
rehabilitated water treatment and distribution infrastructure;
fourth, encouraging the development and implementation of
training, education and certification programs for treatment plant
and distribution system operators employed by our sector; and,
finally, encouraging the accreditation initiatives of our water
utilities.
|
| Should the senators believe that a legislative base for federal
involvement is needed, then CWWA notes that the
twice-proposed Drinking Water Material Safety Act would fill
essential gaps in the overall legislative framework and provided a
direct basis for federal involvement. This proposed legislation had
the support of the provinces and territories as it complemented
existing provincial and territorial programs and legislation.
|
| I will now discuss these recommendations in further detail
including how the government can strengthen its presence.
|
| CWWA notes that the guidelines for Canadian drinking water
quality have been developed on a pure health risk assessment
basis. The difficulty lies in translating these pure health risk
assessment guidelines into practical and affordable risk
management decisions that provide appropriate levels of health
protection.
|
| CCWA therefore recommends that the federal government
should strengthen its research capability and activities in the
following three ways: first, determining the health effects of
contaminants and additives in drinking water; second, evaluating
substances already identified as being of concern for drinking
water quality; and, third, identifying and assessing treatment
technologies to reduce the presence of additives and contaminants
to appropriate levels.
|
| These would benefit all Canadians by providing risk
management information to those provincial, territorial and
municipal agencies who have to make and implement risk
management decisions.
|
| We note that the former proposed Drinking Water Material
Safety Act would have provided both a basis for assessing the
guidelines and for setting standards for additives and components
in drinking water systems. CWWA recommends that the federal
government consider reintroducing the Drinking Water Material
Safety Act to provide a legislative basis for the federal
involvement in the existing federal-provincial-territorial drinking
water program.
|
| Municipal infrastructure is constantly in the headlines and
CWWA knows that senators are well aware of the needs and
problems facing our municipality in this area. We note that the
provision of safe drinking water requires increasingly complex
treatment infrastructure and the maintenance of distribution
systems that presents differing burdens on large and small
communities, especially where the introduction of new treatment
technology is required.
|
| It is the policy of CWWA that municipal water and wastewater
services should recover the full cost of providing these services,
including capital, operating and depreciation costs. This
longstanding policy has been reflected in policy statements now
being made by the Federation of Canadian Municipalities and
their provincial and territorial counterparts. CWWA recommends,
therefore, that the federal government continue to participate in
the municipal infrastructure programs. However, this support
should be tied to the provinces and municipalities instituting
full-cost-pricing policies.
|
| Operator training and certification issues are also current. The
water sector employs more than 200,000 persons across Canada.
Training and education of staff employed in the technical areas of
treatment plants and distribution systems has been a basic practice
in this sector for more than 80 years. Even in the Southern
provinces and three territories where mandatory operator
certification is not currently in place, voluntary certification under
the auspices of our regional associations does take place.
Nonetheless, CWWA urges two things take place in respect to
training and certification: One, that the federal government
provide financial assistance and expert resources for training,
education, and certification programs; two, that the federal
government provide assistance and support to all provinces and
territories in implementing mandatory certification requirements
of programs across Canada.
|
| We advise that the public water sector is also developing and
implementing accreditation programs to ensure that water utilities
are operating at peak efficiency and effectiveness to achieve the
highest quality water. These include programs developed by the
American Water Works Association with the assistance of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency for surface water
supply systems. The original Qual-Serve program and its
successor the Partnerships for Safe Drinking Water Program have
been internationalized by AWWA in the form of the International
Water Treatment Alliance. The CWWA and our regional
associations are developing plans to fully implement this alliance
across Canada.
|
| ISO 9,000 and 14,000 standards are being increasingly adopted
in the municipal water sector. A special form of utility-wide
performance and quality control assessment is the Hazard
Analysis and Critical Control Points program being developed by
the World Health Organization's water program.
|
| Federal, provincial and territorial officials working in drinking
water safety are aware of these developments and encourage the
municipal sector to undertake these programs. Some of these
programs may be part of the future of water management
framework.
|
| CWWA recommends that the federal government encourage
and support the development and implementation of these
utility-based certification and accreditation programs with
financial and human resource support.
|
| In conclusion, CWWA's position on regulatory overlap is firm,
but we do encourage and support a strong federal presence in
national drinking water programs.
|
| Senator Buchanan: I have no questions. Mr. Patterson is an
expert. He answered all the questions. Of course, he is from Nova
Scotia.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Senator Hervieux-Payette: I was involved for several months
in the work being done to ensure fluoration of domestic water. I
was working with the Ministry of Social Affairs, the equivalent in
Quebec of the Department of Health. The opposition to that
measure had to do with the qualifications required from the
treatment plant staff.
|
| How could the federal government involve itself in a provincial
jurisdiction? Would provincial governments accept an
intervention of the federal government in that area? I have not
looked into the matter. I put the question to you. You support an
intervention by the federal government. However, did you ask
provincial authorities whether they would agree with the
proposals that are being put to us? Unless obviously you just send
them a cheque.
|
| Mr. Proulx: Our recommendation was not to introduce
Canadian regulations. Currently, the provinces are responsible for
the certification of drinkable water or waste water plant
employees, for distribution systems and sewer systems.
|
| We suggest to that the federal government should try and
convince the provinces that do not have a mandatory certification
system. Seven provinces and three territories do not have any
mandatory system. Other provinces and territories have a
certification system that is not mandatory, but at least they have a
system. They are beginning to insist for a consistent system being
put in place. Alberta, Ontario since 1993, and Nova Scotia have
mandatory programs. The systems are relatively new. The
requirement to put in place such systems in all provinces would
help at the level of the qualification of personnel and the
maintenance of the systems. We recommend that the Department
of Human Resources Development pursue the education program
as well as the certification programs.
|
| [English]
|
| Senator Hervieux-Payette: What do you call additives in
drinking water? Are you talking about chlorine and the various
products to make sure the water is safe, or are you talking about
other products such as fluoridation of water? I understand you
determining the health effects of contaminants, but is it additives
that are supposed to make the water of a better quality and
sometimes have some good effect for health reasons?
|
| Mr. Ian Douglas, Chair of the Drinking Water Quality
Committee, Canadian Water and Wastewater Association:
Additives are sometimes both things. Usually any chemical that is
applied to water for the purposes of making the water safe would
be also considered an additive, things such as alum, chlorine, et
cetera. The one you mentioned, fluoride, is perhaps a case of
something that is not added for treatment purposes or the safety of
water but for therapeutic health benefit. Additives would
encompass that. In the context of the Drinking Water Safety
Materials Act, additives went beyond that into devices for treating
water; anything that could be applied to potable water prior to
consumption.
|
| [Translation]
|
| Mr. Duncan Ellison, Executive Director, Canadian Water
and Waste Water Association: I would like to add something
with respect to training. The Canadian Water and Waste Water
Association has a national committee on training, education and
certification of operators, and that committee was supported by
Environment Canada. The committee included representatives
from the provinces who are responsible for the certification
process as well as representatives from the regional associations.
The problem for the provinces is that they are not authorized to go
out of their respective provinces to attend a conference or a
symposium held outside the province. The federal government
provided the necessary funding to pay for the travel and lodging
of the provincial representatives. It is a support that is minimal but
absolutely necessary in order to have a national committee. We
can have discussions about the training courses, the curriculum,
the exams and the methodology to guarantee the results, about
reciprocity between the provinces to make it possible for
operators that have been trained and certified in one province to
go work in another one using the same standards.
|
| Senator Hervieux-Payette: With the new systems on the
Internet, could your association give that training without moving
about thousands of people? There are so many of them.
Continuous training can be done on line and lifelong learning
through the Internet.
|
| Mr. Ellison: Yes, this committee was created for managers and
the people who deal with provincial policies. From time to time, it
is necessary to bring together 25 people from all parts of Canada
to discuss the problems and find some solutions together. The
Internet is a tool that can be used by community colleges that are
offering training courses.
|
| [English]
|
| Senator Christensen: Mr. Douglas, I notice that you are
drinking boiled water. Is that any indication?
|
| Mr. Douglas: It is a taste preference. I am happy to drink the
water in Ottawa. I get asked that question every day.
|
| Senator Christensen: We are talking about a certification
system. You are talking about a certification that would be
countrywide: one system where everyone would have to be
certified under that system. Is that the system that is in place
already?
|
| Mr. Douglas: I believe provincially, right now it is in place, in
at least a number of provinces. I am not sure how many. In
Ontario, there is a certification program.
|
| Senator Christensen: Who sets it?
|
| Mr. Douglas: It is set through the Ministry of the Environment.
It is an Ontario environment-training consortium. It is a series of
courses, exams, training, and experience that operators have to
meet in order to become certified. In Ottawa, our treatment
facility is complex. It is considered a Class 4 plant, so the
operators have to be at a certain level of expertise to operate that
type of plant.
|
| Senator Christensen: Does your association support that
certification system?
|
| Mr. Douglas: Yes we do and hope to have the system working
across the country.
|
| Senator Christensen: In your presentation on page 5, you are
recommending that the federal government should strengthen its
research capabilities and activities. Are we able to do that under
present legislation, or do you feel there would need to be other
legislation in place to allow the government to do all those things?
|
| Mr. Patterson: The current research capabilities or research
efforts are being handled through Health Canada. The framework
is in place to do it. It just needs additional financial and human
resources to keep up with the demand in that area.
|
| Senator Christensen: Once the research is done, what about
the implementation of the findings from that research? As it is
now, there seems to be such a fragmentation of jurisdictions.
|
| Mr. Patterson: It is straightforward. The federal government is
responsible for the health risk assessment, and then the provincial
jurisdictions are responsible for the management decisions. It
cannot make the management decisions until the assessments
have been done.
|
| Senator Christensen: Would not Bill S-18 bring it together
more than it is now and help with the fragmentation?
|
| Mr. Ellison: One of the concerns about simply doing this under
the Food and Drugs Act is that the issue of the additives and the
contaminants could be addressed as they are in foods or drugs.
This is a broader issue than that, and that comes down to the fact
that removal of these very often involves intensive research into
the capability of the treatment technology which is available to
remove contaminants from a water source, or how to assure that
the additives which are there are limited to their required
amounts.
|
| We believe that this could be done without a legislative basis.
In fact, Health Canada largely does that at the request of the
provinces now, and there is a very fine cadre of scientists who
work in the drinking water section of Health Canada that work on
that.
|
| Our argument for suggesting that there should be a legislative
basis, and in particular the Drinking Water Material Safety Act,
and I will speak to this as an ex-senior federal public servant, is
that without a legislative mandate, funding often gets cut off. This
is one way to support the idea of a legislative mandate, because it
gets included in the list of acts that a minister is responsible to,
and he can go to the Treasury Board and argue that he has
mandatory responsibilities that are reflected in legislation.
|
| The Drinking Water Material Safety Act addressed a much
wider issue of drinking water safety than just simply additives and
contaminants that would occur in the food process.
|
| Senator Christensen: On page 6, you are saying in the second
paragraph that the water services should recover fully the costs of
providing the services. From whom should these costs be
recovered fully?
|
| Mr. Patterson: Those costs will be recovered from the user.
Many utilities in Canada are selling water at less than cost, and
water should be sold at its true value. I could digress here. In
Nova Scotia, for example, we are required to include depreciation
of the asset as an operating cost, and that is good planning. The
consumer, in paying the water rates, is paying for the future
replacement of the infrastructure. In most provinces in Canada
that is not a requirement. You see many utilities where the
treatment plant wears out, there is no money in reserve, and they
cannot get funding from the infrastructure programs. What do
they do? We are saying that if full cost pricing was implemented
across the system and utilities would be forced to include that in
their operating costs, we the customers would be paying the true
cost of producing that water and providing for the future
replacement and enhancement of the treatment facilities.
|
| Senator Christensen: It has been the practice in municipalities
to provide the service of sewer and water treatment. Is there any
move towards privatizing that service?
|
| Mr. Proulx: There is a move towards that in some
municipalities, and it has already been privatized in other
municipalities. I could not give you a percentage. They hire
private sector people to build the facilities and others are hiring
the private sector to build and operate the facilities.
|
| Senator Christensen: How are they working?
|
| Mr. Proulx: The position of the Ontario Waterworks
Association is clear. We support what is best for the particular
municipality. If it means that a private sector operation is best for
that municipality, then that is what we support.
|
| We also make it clear that municipal sector operations are well
run also; there are many well-run municipal sector operations.
From that point of view, both can run the systems and both can
run them efficiently to the benefit of their customers. It is
individual to the municipality.
|
| Hamilton has a private sector operation, and a number of
municipalities, such as Moncton, which has gone with a
design-build-operate facility, and it is working well for them.
Edmonton Power Corporation, EPCORP, runs a strong and
efficient facility in Edmonton.
|
| Senator Christensen: In those cases they are doing
100 per cent recovery from the consumer user.
|
| Mr. Proulx: That promotes the 100 per cent cost-recovery
because it is a private sector operation.
|
| Senator Christensen: We have a small municipality in the
Yukon that is looking for a waste treatment facility that is doing
just that. It seems to be a novel idea up there for a community of
five hundred people. We wonder how they will be able to pass on
that cost to the users.
|
| Mr. Proulx: In the small municipalities, there is a definite need
for technical knowledge. Small municipalities do not have that
core, so there is a definite need. Is that with the private sector?
Perhaps, but it could also be a big brother or a big sister approach
from the local, larger municipality. There are different models,
and many of them are being viewed through the Walkerton
inquiry as well.
|
| Mr. Douglas: Sometimes the public feels that the drinking
water is affecting their health. I hope they do not think profit is
the number one objective, which brings us back to the drinking
water guidelines. The standards, protocols and procedures must be
in place to protect the long-term maintenance of that
infrastructure. If you are going to hand it over to someone, you
might want to consider a 20-year or 25-year term. This will help
to ensure that they do not run it into the ground, take their money
in the contract and then leave. These are the concerns we have
with privatization.
|
| Senator Christensen: To go back to Bill C-18, it seems that
you do not feel that by implementing this piece of legislation, it
would not reduce the fragmentation that now exists and it would
not give a focus to the problem of clean water and water delivery.
Is that correct?
|
| Mr. Proulx: No, and as I previously said, not only would it not
do that but it would prove to be disruptive to the current system.
We feel it is well refined, and we would like to see it stay as it is,
in a condition where we Canadians are forcing the improvements
that are necessary on a year-to-year basis.
|
| The Chairman: I want to explore the full cost pricing. You
used an example from Alberta, EPCOR. Maybe it can be twisted
the other way. EPCORP is owned by the city of Edmonton, but
they use the profits to expand all over. Now, they are selling
services 300 to 400 miles away. They are talking about moving
into Ontario. They are not really the private sector because they
are owned by the city of Edmonton. However, they are taking that
profit and going on to other ideas.
|
| It is hard to stop people taking the profits and not expanding
the organization. That is one thing that worries me about the full
cost pricing.
|
| I wonder if there should be a certain amount of
cross-subsidization between mining or manufacturing companies
that use large amounts of water. Perhaps they should pay the
individual that provides them with the water. This would be
particularly helpful in the West where we are running short of it.
We have not found a way of diverting natural water sources to
Alberta, but we will.
|
| There is the necessary level that Mr. Douglas talks about, and
an industry level. Pricing often means that you are turning the
elephant loose amongst the chickens, and I am not sure that your
cost pricing would work that way.
|
| Mr. Proulx: First of all, in respect of full cost pricing, we are
not suggesting one flat rate. Some municipalities can have
different types of rate structures within them. These can be both
inclining or declining rate structures. Waterloo is restricted on
ground water so they have an inclining rate structure. The bigger
the user of water, the more they have to pay. Other municipalities
have focussed in the opposite way: the more you use, the less you
have to pay. There are arguments for both sides.
|
| Right now it is within the municipalities' jurisdictions to set the
rates. All we are getting at is that it should be full cost recovery,
flat rate, declining rate or inclining rate, to ensure that you are
receiving all the funds to support the complete water system.
|
| Senator Adams: About one month ago, we had witnesses from
Department of Health and the Department of Indian Affairs and
Northern Development. In my home region, about 85 per cent of
people depend on water delivery. They do not have a water and
sewer facility in the community. Rankin Inlet is the only one that
I know that has water and sewer facilities.
|
| The witnesses from those departments I mentioned did not
have a manual to explain how the system would work in the
community and how to treat the water. As engineers you
gentlemen are familiar with these systems. Right now, DIAND
has provided 100 per cent funding for community water systems.
Are you able to consult with government representatives so that
we can know how this will work?
|
| Mr. Patterson: I witnessed that in June when I was in was in
Kugluktuk, Nunavut. I walked around town as the man was
making the water deliveries. I asked him numerous questions
about the water and systems and he had the answers right there.
He told me that if he makes a mistake that his customer tells him
right away.
|
| I am not sure there is a viable alternative to that system. That
system works for those Northern communities. The community
that I was in was largely on solid rock. I do not have a clear
answer for you. I know the existing level of funding, and I would
think that, through the Northern Water and Wastewater
Association, there should be some technical expertise. However, I
do not know that for certain.
|
| Mr. Proulx: The NRC, jointly with the Federation of Canadian
Municipalities, has a program to look at best practices across
Canada: one of them looks specifically at that specific kind of
geography and also considers municipal size issues across the
territories and Canada.
|
| They are going to look at best practices and will hopefully
come up with something that will help those municipalities. The
NRC-FCM project has specifically identified those small
municipalities to make sure that they are being addressed in the
scan. It is not only the South, the East or the West. It is the North
as well.
|
| Mr. Douglas: I would add that the CWWA has a fair
membership of technical knowledge. If you wanted to pose a
question or look for comments, you could pose them through
CWWA and we could put the word out to get comments on new
ideas or improvements. We are used as a technical resource on
those sorts of issues.
|
| Senator Watt: To what extent is your organization familiar
with what is happening in Nunavik and Northern Labrador?
|
| Mr. Patterson: We have a director, Bob Phillips, from
Cambridge Bay. He is from a department that has to do with
health and environment. He is responsible for the water and
wastewater systems throughout the western region of Nunavik.
He sits on our board, and we meet with him a couple of times a
year. He is aware of some of the issues.
|
| To answer your question to what extent are we the board
members aware of your issues, I would say we are probably not
very much aware of what the real issues are up there.
|
| Senator Watt: Is it in the western Arctic side of Nunavut that
you mentioned that you went to visit?
|
| Mr. Patterson: Yes, in the very western end.
|
| Senator Watt: Are you familiar with the issues in Labrador
and Nunavik. Nunavik was known as Northern Quebec in the old
days. There are about 50 municipalities all together in that area.
Northern Labrador is having a similar problem.
|
| One of our biggest problems is the water coming. The land
itself becomes a whole massive lake, not isolated lakes, especially
in the springtime. There is always drainage coming from other
lake systems into our systems. The other factor is what goes up
into the air and comes back down.
|
| We seem to be having a large problem experiencing people
dying from cancer, and no one seems to have a real good handle
on that matter. Over the last couple of years I have been trying to
put together a report so that these issues will make sense. I am
about ready to finish that report, and I am hoping to table that
here, Mr. Chairman, sometime within the next couple of weeks.
|
| You need to get up there. If your association is to take any form
in our region, Northern Quebec, Nunavik, Nunavut and Labrador,
including the reserves, you have to have some first-hand
information of what is going on. You must know about what is
there and what is not there.
|
| The people are dropping off like trees right now. They are
dying from cancer. I would imagine it has much to do with the
fact that what they intake is not being monitored, not only the
water but also the food.
|
| I would urge you to get on top of that problem. I will give you
one example from a community that I know well. It is the
community that I go back home to every weekend. It does not
have a filtering system in terms of drainage or in terms of the
water waste. It is pumped into the land and is seeping into the
brooks and the creeks, which have fish. It is going into the major
rivers. That is a totally ungoverned area.
|
| It is not an isolated case. It is a problem throughout all the
communities in the North. I would imagine that it also applies to
the reserves.
|
| We have done very well at ruining our environment down
South, and we are on the way to ruining it in the North as well. It
is an urgent matter.
|
| Mr. Patterson: The community that I visited had a population
of about 1100. They trucked the sewage waste seven kilometres
or eight kilometres out of town to a stream flowing away from
town, and they dumped it there. That was the best practice
available to them at the time.
|
| Senator Watt: That is still the practice today.
|
| Mr. Patterson: It is not a proper practice.
|
| Senator Watt: We are starting to witness people dying from
the bacteria that they consume.
|
| Mr. Patterson: There might be some way that we could work
with the federal government for technology exchange.
|
| Senator Watt: When the question is raised, the
federal-provincial jurisdictional problems are always the obstacle
whenever we are trying to move ahead and achieve something.
|
| As far as I am concerned, the federal government has the sole
responsibility in regards to the reserve. I do not think that there
are provincial implications there. That would probably also apply
Nunavut. However, Nunavik is of a special nature because we are
administratively under Quebec provincial jurisdiction. I believe
that Labrador is in the same category as Nunavik.
|
| There is no excuse for the federal government to tap in on what
is up there, but they would need people like you to help identify
those problems. You should see it for yourself and press it as an
urgent issue.
|
| I would like to come back Bill S-18 because I got the feeling
that you were not supporting Bill S-18 when you were making the
presentations. I, was looking for some instrument to be put in
place by the Government of Canada. If the Government of
Canada is going to use the argument that it is not their
responsibility, it is a provincial responsibility, it becomes border
line conduct, especially when dealing with Aboriginal
communities.
|
| I was looking towards an instrument that would be put in place
by the Government of Canada, something similar to Bill S-18. If I
understand you correctly, you are saying to me that I could use
this as a way to make the government aware that there is a
problem and that it has to be addressed but not necessarily in the
fashion that this bill is being carved.
|
| You also discussed a proposal that was made for water material
drinking safety act. This is not in place at this point, I believe.
You would rather see this being moved ahead because you feel
this is going to get us to where we want to go. Could you
elaborate on that?
|
| Mr. Ellison: The Food and Drugs Act is a typical federal
enabling act, which enables the federal government to set certain
standards and to set up an inspection and an enforcement regime
to ensure those standards are met. There are many such acts at the
federal level.
|
| The difficulty for this association and its members is that there
existents a completely parallel set of provincial statutes that
address exactly this situation. The advantages we see from a
Drinking Water Material Safety Act, which was tabled twice and
died on the Order Paper, is that it sets up the provisions for the
federal government to do things, including research in order to set
standards for additives and contaminants, but it does not set up an
inspection regime that would duplicate, and perhaps conflict, with
the provinces.
|
| This was one of the reasons why the associations supported the
bill when it was being proposed and why the provinces found it
agreeable. The bill filled a gap in the overall legislative
framework that the provinces were unable to deal with. They
could deal with it within their own province, but we would have
no national standards for additives, contaminants, drinking water
system components and things of that nature. The non-threatening
manner of the approach favoured the drinking water material
safety proposed legislation, possibly with some changes.
|
| The Chairman: The manner may have been non-threatening,
but it did not accomplish anything. The bill died on the Order
Paper. I am wondering, if this bill were passed if that would force
them to go back and address your concerns, have you thought of
that?
|
| Mr. Ellison: The bill died on the Order Paper, and I will
speculate about this because I was not privy to the conversations
involving Mr. Rock and the ministers in support of it. However,
there was widespread opposition to the bill from the
manufacturers of drinking water treatment units, other
point-of-use devices and the plumbing industry who saw this as
something that would address the question of the contaminants
coming from brass used in taps and valves. Perhaps the issue
could be looked at again.
|
| The essential feature that we want to see firmly entrenched
legislatively, is the area of health risk assessment and the
management that comes through the technology sectors.
|
| The Chairman: Your first choice would be that other
instrument rather than this one. Is that correct?
|
| Mr. Ellison: This instrument does not deal with the technology
issue and the other one did.
|
| Senator Watt: Are you saying that we are dealing with
something that needs to be dealt with, but at the same time we
might be focussing on the wrong area when a new method of
technology may be the one we should focus on to try to find a
solution? For example, chlorine is used to purify water. Is that the
only technology in the world?
|
| Mr. Douglas: No, chlorine is not the only technology. As a
side issue, there is much encouraging research with UV.
|
| Senator Watt: I am not talking about new research. I am
talking about what is used today.
|
| Mr. Douglas: Yes, chlorine is used in almost every water
supply.
|
| Senator Watt: There are companies out there that are trying to
come up with new technologies to purify and filter the water. You
said that you would like to see the federal government more
involved in finding solutions rather than just the regulatory
aspects. It takes time for those people who have new methods of
technology to get their technology tested or approved. Sometimes
they do not know where to go.
|
| Mr. Douglas: Much of that research is going on. Canada is
certainly a leader in water technology research. It is happening at
universities across Canada as well as private sector companies.
Canada is a strong leader in the field of UV, or ultraviolet
disinfection. We are a strong leader in membrane technology that
is ideal for small systems, not unlike those used in Northern
communities. Research is also taking place at utilities. Health
Canada is another area where we are recommending research be
supported at that level.
|
| I do not wish to underplay the importance of the Canadian
drinking water guidelines. We did not bring a copy of them today.
However, this is a body of work as Mr. Ellison would tell us,
which has been years in the making, with a tremendous amount of
science behind it. We wish to ensure that we maintain that and
support that research.
|
| Right now, there are 104 contaminants or substances that are
regulated through those drinking water guidelines. That becomes
the bible for drinking water in Canada. In the case of Ontario,
they basically adopt those guidelines lock, stock and barrel. They
become provincial guidelines, with the possible addition of a few
parameters. They have become an important foundation upon
which all Canadians can get a consistent level of drinking water
quality. I do not want to downplay those. I am not sure that the
prior bill did not touch the water guidelines. That is a different
focus.
|
| Mr. Ellison: The former bill, as proposed, specifically
authorized the research programs that are necessary to produce
those guidelines. The concern is that the guidelines are just
health-risk based. The guidelines contain statements that
recognize that municipalities or utilities may not achieve those
guidelines, and perhaps should not because of the technological,
cost and the importance of other parameters that should be
adhered to first. This is where the risk management phase comes
in. You must decide how much money you will spend to manage
which risks. We know that there are some chemical parameters,
such as, boron and arsenic, which are prevalent in some
communities at reasonably high levels compared to others, but
perhaps not to where they are causing an acute health risk. They
may be causing chronic health risk, but we have time to develop
the technology to develop those parameters.
|
| By making the guidelines subject to the Statutory Instruments
Act, they would then be subject to the regulatory impact analysis
statement, which says that you must be able to demonstrate that
there is a clear benefit that exceeds the costs. Those benefits are
sometimes difficult to measure because they talk about the value
of life or the value of a healthy life versus the cost. We are
making those health risk management judgments from the time
we decide to get out of bed in the morning to the time we go
back. Should we have this high cholesterol steak tonight? Should
we get in the car? Should I have a second drink?
|
| By making the guidelines through the legislation a statutory
instrument, they are subject to this kind of rigorous assessment of
the risk management possibilities.
|
| Senator Watt: After the regulatory guidelines are set there will
be implementation that needs to take place. Are we in a sense
delaying a chance to implement something meaningful if we do
not address the infrastructure and the technology when we are
addressing the guidelines instead of leaving it for the second
stage?
|
| How can we use one bullet to hit two at the same time with
your network that you have now? How can we express that this is
an urgent matter? What is the infrastructure that needs to be in
place? What is the technology that could be adaptable which is
not being used today? That is my concern. I feel that we are too
slow.
|
| Mr. Douglas: The situation in Ontario is the most familiar to
me. Since Walkerton, new regulations have come into being in
Ontario regarding drinking water. Those regulations state that the
Canadian drinking water guidelines must be achieved. Through a
review, auditing and certificate of approval process, they can sit
down with Ottawa to determine the areas where they are falling
short. There is a two-year period to bring in those technology
changes, to effect whatever capital and infrastructure
improvements are needed to bring it up the level. This is not a
drop-dead date, but there is some phasing in. Clearly, we are
moving faster on projects because of that process.
|
| That is a case where federal guidelines were used and applied
with some pressure within the province for a progressive benefit
in drinking water quality. That is an example.
|
| Mr. Proulx: Senator, in reply to your specific question and in
consideration of the geographic constraints that these small
communities experience, the policies that we are promoting may
well conflict with the reality of those communities. In all
likelihood, special requirements will be necessary. That is
probably beyond the scope of our organization. Notwithstanding
that, we will do what we can to help you. However, I sense you
have some unique problems that need to be addressed.
|
| Senator Watt: Not only are we killing the people, but we are
also killing the environment and the fish and natural habitats.
|
| The Chairman: I notice that the title of your organization is
the Canadian Water and Wastewater Association. That is
intriguing. As a Westerner, I distinguish between sewage water
and wastewater. If you ever buy an RV, they will have wastewater.
That is what you wash out of the kitchen sink.
|
| Surface run-off water is what contaminates our watercourses,
and that is a big problem, as was evidenced in Walkerton.
Fertilization of lawns and different types of chemicals used affects
the quality of drinking water. If you cannot control the pollution
of water through surface drainage, it will be extraordinarily
difficult to control the quality of drinking water. Has your
organization worked much with wastewater?
|
| Mr. Proulx: For clarity, in our title the word wastewater means
sewage. It is the treatment of the municipal sewage that -
|
| The Chairman: Do you leave out the treatment of surface run
off?
|
| Mr. Proulx: I will come to that. In the operation of a water
utility, we protect the utility in a three-phased approach. The first
phase is source water protection. If it is a surface reservoir, we
will institute measures to protect it from surface run off. If it is a
ground water supply, we institute, in my particular case, a ground
water protection strategy to limit activities in the area that might
in the future pollute the ground water. For example, intensive
livestock operations are not permitted in the areas immediately
around the well source.
|
| The other two platforms are the disinfection of the water and
the maintenance of an adequate and properly operated distribution
system. It is a three-phased approach. They are all important, but
source water protection is every bit as important as the other. In
Walkerton, one of the problems was the source water protection
aspect of the situation was lacking.
|
| Senator Buchanan: As a provincial politician of 25 years, I
may look at things in a provincial rather than that federal way, but
I am changing. I suspect that the majority of the provinces would
not be in tune with this bill. It appears to me that this bill will
bring confusion for not only the provinces, but also the
municipalities and could be costly in the end result.
|
| With the present system in this country of federal-provincial
dialogue, and federal-provincial committees and ministers groups,
we could end up with regulations that overlap. We have had
enough of that. We have had many situations where there is so
much overlap that the people involved and the stakeholders are so
confused that it does not make sense.
|
| The Canadian Council of Ministers of Environment should be
involved in this discussion rather than a bill in the Senate or the
House of Commons. I may be off base, but I suspect the
provinces would not be in agreement with what is going on here.
|
| Mr. Proulx: In our written presentation, you will see that we
recommend enhancing the existing process. We believe the
existing process is working well and is being refined on a regular
basis. Perhaps it will always need to be refined as different issues
arise.
|
| If there is a weakness in the existing process, it is the fact that
most Canadians are not aware of how the Canadian drinking
water guidelines are developed, or are not aware of what the
current Canadian drinking water guidelines encompass.
|
| We recommend in our written brief that the federal government
go on a publicity campaign to try to tell the Canadian public the
process we have entered into. We believe it is a good process. We
know the process because we work with it five days a week. We
believe most Canadians are not aware of the process. We think
there is some room for action there. You will see that in the
written presentation.
|
| Senator Hervieux-Payette: Testing is inexpensive in Quebec
and any citizen can have his water tested and have the results
quickly. Is that service available across the country, so that if you
want to monitor your own water you could?
|
| Mr. Proulx: For microbiological testing, which is the biggest
concern of most of the public, you will receive the results usually
within a couple of days. Is that universal across Canada? No, it is
not. It depends on the municipalities across the province.
|
| I know that Ottawa does it and most of the large municipalities
will do it. Even though EPCOR is a private company, I assume
that they do it for their constituents as well.
|
| Senator Hervieux-Payette: Even if a company or municipality
is testing, I would not trust them. We need some external
provincial laboratories to check. Is that available?
|
| Mr. Douglas: The Ministry of Health would usually offer that
service. When a customer phones us with a concern, we
investigate, take samples and give the results. The key difference
is that we have to do it through an accredited lab that is audited
by the Canadian council. That is the quality assurance. We do the
testing, but it is done through an accredited process.
|
| Senator Finnerty: They refuse to test the water in the lake at
my cottage. They say they will test a well, but not lake water.
|
| Mr. Douglas: Are you using the lake water?
|
| Senator Finnerty: It is a spring-fed lake, but we have beaver
in the lake, which is why I want it tested. They refuse to test it.
|
| Mr. Douglas: If you are using that water for potable purposes,
I think the health department should be testing it.
|
| Senator Finnerty: If things are working so well, why are we
getting so many advisories to boil water?
|
| Mr. Douglas: That is a good question. The regulations have
changed, especially in Ontario. We do 125,000 drinking water
tests per year in Ottawa. If any one of those tests shows anything
unusual or anything that exceeds any one of the 104 guidelines, it
must be reported to the medical officer within minutes and we
must also notify the Ministry of the Environment and provide all
sorts of documents.
|
| We are not seeing all these boil water advisories because the
water quality has changed. It is because the regulatory and
reporting process has changed. Previously, when we got a positive
sample in those 125,000 tests, we typically resampled. The
positive test could be as a result of a contaminated bottle or a lab
error. If upon retesting we confirmed the presence of something,
we would consider a boil water advisory.
|
| Post-Walkerton we are erring on the side of complete caution.
We advise the public in case there is a problem and check later.
That is why you are seeing media reports of boil water advisories.
I do not think the water has changed; I think the reporting process
has changed.
|
| The Chairman: Thank you very much. You have been most
informative and interesting.
|
| Mr. Proulx: Thank you for this opportunity to appear before
you.
|
| The committee adjourned.
|