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Seven dead from e-coli contamination in Ontario, Canada
By Keith Jones
1 June 2000
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The deaths of seven residents of the rural Ontario town of
Walkerton have shaken public confidence in the Ontario Tory government
and its program of deregulation and privatization. The seven,
and one thousand other Walkerton residents, fell ill last month
after the local water supply became contaminated with Escherichia
coli O157:H7, a potentially deadly strain of e-coli bacteria.
Walkerton has a population of 5,000.
Medical experts are terming the Walkerton outbreak the world's
second-worst instance of e-coli contamination spread through a
water system. (Most e-coli infections come from eating tainted
meat.)
Fueling the public outcry is a mountain of evidence that the
deaths were entirely needless.
The Walkerton Public Utilities Commission (PUC) knew the water
supply was contaminated for at least five days before it told
the public that anything was amiss. Even as many Walkerton residents
were falling sick with bloody diarrhea, and water test results
were showing e-coli contamination, PUC officials allegedly told
the area medical officer on three separate occasions that the
water supply was safe.
The private lab that found Walkerton's water to be contaminated
with a potentially fatal bacteria failed to alert either local
health authorities or the Ontario Ministry of Environment, which
has legal responsibility for ensuring the safety of drinking water
in the province.
Walkerton's water system has been plagued with problems for
years. Two years ago the Ministry of Environment made recommendations
to the Walkerton PUC regarding the use of chlorine, the training
of staff and the testing of the water supply, but the Ministry
failed to ensure that its recommendations were implemented. Nor
did it act on several reports earlier this year that showed contaminants
were getting into the Walkerton water supply.
The Ontario Ministry of the Environment's failure to intervene
in Walkerton is bound up with a drastic downsizing of its operations.
Since Tory Premier Mike Harris came to power in 1995, the Ministry's
annual budget has been cut by 42 percent, from $287 million to
$165 million, and the Ministry's workforce has been slashed from
2,400 to 1,500.
In 1996, the Ministry had 113 employees responsible for monitoring
drinking water quality. Now it has 65. In recent years, much of
the Ministry's efforts have focused on meeting the Tories' objective
of cutting the number of provincial environmental regulations
in half.
John Ibbitson, the Globe and Mail's commentator on Ontario
politics and the author of a book enthusiastically supporting
the Ontario Tories' Common Sense Revolution, conceded
on May 30, The Mike Harris government's environmental policies
contributed to the deaths in Walkerton. The details have yet to
be determined.... But they caused people to die.
However Harris has brazenly rejected any responsibility for
the tragedy. Speaking May 29 in an emergency Ontario Legislature
debate on Walkerton, Harris insisted that the Tories' public and
social services cutswhich have financed massive tax reductions,
overwhelmingly to the benefit of the richwere directed solely
at making government more efficient. At no time
was any person downsized in a way that should have affected the
delivery of any service, declared the Premier.
Last week, when confronted by Walkerton residents, some of
them carrying placards denouncing the Tory cuts to the Ministry
of the Environment, Harris said they should focus their anger
on the New Democratic Party (NDP) government which the Tories
replaced in 1995, because it was NDP Premier Bob Rae who first
allowed Ontario municipalities to have their water tested by private
labs, rather than by the Ministry of the Environment.
In truth, there is enough blame to go round. With regard to
the environment and public health, as with many other matters,
the Harris Tories intensified and accelerated regressive changes
in public service and social welfare policy initiated by the Rae
NDP government.
Rae began the process of privatizing the testing of Ontario's
drinking water. In 1993, his administration ordered municipalities
to pay for government water tests and allowed them to use private
labs. In 1996, the Tory provincial government closed down four
of the province's five water testing labs, ignoring warnings from
the province's former environment commissioner, Eva Ligeti, that
the safety of Ontario's water supply might be jeopardized.
Whereas the closed government labs had a legal obligation to
inform the Environment Ministry and local health authorities of
any tests revealing contaminants, the new private testing regime
left it to the labs' discretion as to whether they would inform
health authorities or even the Ministry. Moreover, the testing
of Ontarians' drinking water by labs certified by the Canadian
Standards Association was not required, only recommended.
The breakdown of Walkerton's water treatment
system
Exactly how Walkerton's water system came to be contaminated
with a deadly strain of e-coli bacteria may never be known. Many
have suggested that livestock fecal matter got into the wells
that feed the town's water system as a result of heavy rains on
May 12.
Even if the heavy rainfall did play a critical role in the
Walkerton tragedy, the contamination of the town's water system
was not a sudden event. On May 29, the deputy minister of the
environment said the Ontario government had been aware at least
since 1994 that Walkerton was having problems with its water supply,
and that these problems included bacterial contamination. In 1998,
after the PUC said it accepted the Ministry's recommendations
for improving the system, nothing was done to ensure that Walkerton
had the will or the means to carry them out.
That a rural community such as Walkerton should be hit with
an outbreak of e-coli has not surprised experts. Walkerton is
a center of industrial livestock productiona form of agriculture
that environmentalists have frequently criticized as a threat
to water safety, because it results in the production of large
amounts of fecal matter.
A 1995 Heath Canada study made known to Ontario officials in
1997 identified Walkerton as a high-risk area for e-coli contamination
and attributed the danger to the large cattle population. When
asked to comment on the Walkerton e-coli outbreak, the author
of the 1995 study, Dr. Pascal Michel, said, I was surprised
by the scale of the event, but no, I was not surprised by where
it happened.
It is believed that in recent months the Walkerton PUC was
trying to cope with a breakdown in its chlorination system. Five
times in the first four months of this year, a private lab, GAP
EnviroMicrobial Services, detected bacteria in water samples from
Walkerton. The lab claims that in all cases the Ministry of Environment
was informed of the problems. The Ministry has conceded that it
was notified on at least two occasions, including in early April,
when four of eight Walkerton samples were found to contain coliform,
a broad category of intestinal bacteria that includes the O157:H7
strain.
Yet, in violation of it own regulations, the Ministry did not
inform the local health commissioner in Walkerton of the potential
health hazard. Nor, from all reports, did the adverse tests prompt
the Ministry to offer the Walkerton PUC technical or financial
assistance.
Thus far, PUC manager Stan Koebel has failed to provide any
explanation as to why he waited until May 23, some five days after
being informed that e-coli was in Walkerton's water supply, to
warn the public of the danger. On May 30, Koebel emerged from
a week in seclusion to appear at a press conference along with
a well-known Toronto criminal lawyer, whom he has retained as
his legal counsel. However, they refused to answer any questions.
For its part, the non-accredited, private lab that found the
e-coli contamination, A&L Laboratories Canada East, has defended
its failure to inform either the Ministry or local heath officials.
A&L Laboratories, which was hired by the Walkerton PUC on
an interim basis when the above-mentioned GAP Services gave up
water-testing to concentrate on more lucrative consulting work,
says it is blameless since there is no regulation obliging it
to inform anyone other than the local utility.
Alarmed by the large numbers of Walkerton residents falling
sick, Dr. Murray McQuigge, the Walkerton-area health commissioner,
on May 21 issued his own order to Walkerton residents to boil
their water. This was two days before Koebel finally admitted
that the town's water supply was contaminated.
Dr. McQuigge has said publicly that the PUC manager's tardiness
in informing him and the public of the e-coli outbreak may have
played a role in at least some of the seven deaths. At the same
time, Dr. McQuigge has insisted that responsibility for the breakdown
also lies with the provincial government. Ontario's water purification
system has been a disaster waiting to happen since 1996,
he explained.
In a back-handed admission of its own responsibility, the Harris
government on May 29 announced plans to introduce legislation
tightening regulation of Ontario's water system and the private
testing of drinking water. Henceforth, all local water systems
will have to be recertified by the Ministry every three years,
private labs will have to inform the Ministry of problematic results,
and water-testing labs will have to be accredited. But the government
has said nothing about committing additional funds or resources
to the monitoring of Ontario's drinking water. Says McQuigge,
You just can't announce something like that and not have
adequate staff to do it.
Premier Harris has pledged that his government will ferret
out the truth about what happened in Walkerton, noting that the
e-coli outbreak is currently under investigation by the Ontario
Provincial Police, the Ministry of the Environment, and a committee
of the provincial legislature, and will also be the subject of
a coroner's inquest. But the Tory Premier has already exempted
his own government from blame, declaring that there is no causal
relationship between the gutting of the Ministry of the Environment
and the deaths in Walkerton.
Harris has, moreover, publicly reaffirmed his support for privatizing
environmental regulation. Taking his cue from Conrad Black's National
Post, Harris argued May 30 that while human error
appears to have occurred in public institutionsi.e., the
downsized Ontario Ministry of the Environment and the tiny Walkerton
PUCthe private sector, including the lab that chose not
to inform provincial or local authorities of the e-coli outbreakperformed
admirably. It looks to us, declared the Premier, that
the private sector labs reported very efficiently, effectively,
and have done the job they were supposed to do.
See Also:
Ontario:
the fight against the Harris Government
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