The Ottawa Riverkeeper


Water does not obey political boundaries

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

By Thomas S. Axworthy, Citizen Special August 13, 2010

Writing this piece from my cottage overlooking Lake Winnipeg, my eyes glory in the beauty of the lake but my nose is affronted by the smell of toxic blue-green algae, which is now so bad that there are warnings everywhere about bathing. The lake is sick and some fear it is in a death spiral with the spread of algae worsening every year because of municipal sewage and the runoff from hog farms.

The plight of Canada’s sixth Great Lake is just one example of why the Water Charter endorsed by Canada’s premiers in Winnipeg last week is so timely. The Charter emphasizes the need to improve conservation and monitoring of Canada’s fresh water resources and the premiers should be commended for responding to Canadians’ growing concerns about the state of their rivers, lakes and swimming holes. In a recent Ipsos Reid poll, two-thirds of Canadians said they believed conditions in Canada’s lakes were getting worse. The dramatic decline in the health of Lake Winnipeg suggests these concerns are warranted.

And it is not just Lake Winnipeg that is facing water woes. Flowing through our nation’s capital, the Ottawa River reached its lowest levels in almost a century following an unseasonably dry winter and spring, causing cancellations to canoeing competitions and threatening fish and crops. Water has receded nearly 30 feet in some areas.

On the other side of the Ottawa River, Gatineau experienced a water shortage in May so severe the municipality instituted a temporary ban on all outdoor water use, including filling swimming pools and even drinking from outdoor taps. Residents who disobeyed the ban were heavily fined.

On the west coast, British Columbia is so dry that water bombers are struggling to find enough water to put out hundreds of forest fires. Regions such as the Okanagan in B.C. are facing water crises due to reduced mountain snowpack and rising human consumption.

As water levels drop, the concentration of pollutants in the water increases, as does the temperature. The sun heats shallower waters more quickly, contributing to the growth of toxic algal blooms, which are, unfortunately, not unique to Lake Winnipeg.

And Ottawa is far too familiar with the issue of raw sewage overflow from aging combined sewer systems, closing beaches on occasion after a heavy rainfall. Though the city is taking steps to address this, the problem is again, not unique to Ottawa, but is common among many older cities in Canada.

Yet, with freshwater problems accelerating across Canada, it was left to the premiers to call for a pan-Canadian approach to water stewardship. Where is the federal government? Why isn’t it calling for and implementing a national water framework to complement the premiers’ push for improved water governance?

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Ottawa Riverkeeper 2-379 Danforth Ave. Ottawa, Ontario K2A 0E1 Toll Free: 1-888-9-KEEPER keeper@ottawariverkeeper.ca