The Province

Decades-old Lytton boil-water order partly lifted

- RANDY SHORE rshore@postmedia.com

Two communitie­s in the Lytton First Nation have lifted boil-water advisories that have been in place for a generation, according to the nation’s lead water operator.

Half a dozen of Lytton’s 56 reserves are too small to tap into federal infrastruc­ture funds and have in some cases been boiling water for more than 15 years and probably much longer.

“They’ve been boiling their water since I got here,” said Warren Brown, who runs nine water treatment systems for the Lytton First Nation. “We can’t get a centralize­d water system for our smaller communitie­s because they fall below the federal threshold.”

Communitie­s with fewer than five homes do not qualify for federal funding for public drinking water systems, according to Indigenous Services Canada.

But thanks to an innovative water treatment system created by UBC engineerin­g professor Madjid Mohseni, five families on two reserves are able to drink water from their tap, some for the first time in their lives.

“Chief Janet Webster is having trouble convincing her daughter to drink their tap water when she comes to visit,” Brown said. “She grew up never being able to drink the water and she’s in her 20s.”

The self-contained plants — each about the size of a two-door fridge — filter the water and destroy pathogens such as E. coli and fecal coliform with ultraviole­t radiation. Each home system costs about $7,000 to assemble and install.

“Within a couple of months, the samples all came back negative for any bad stuff,” Brown said.

There are 17 First Nations in B.C. under boil-water advisories, according to the health authority. At least 10 of those water systems do not qualify for federal funds.

Three more are under do-not-consume advisories, meaning the water contains contaminan­ts that are not destroyed by boiling.

Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott announced last month that more than 250 additional Indigenous water systems would be eligible for federal support as part of a $1.8-billion program unveiled in 2015 to eliminate boil-water advisories on First Nations by 2021. That brings the total of eligible systems to more than 1,000 across Canada.

To date, 52 long-term drinking water advisories have been lifted on First Nations across the country, while 28 new advisories have been added.

Another 36 short-term advisories were in place on First Nations as of Dec. 31, according to a report from the David Suzuki Foundation.

Funding to test the treatment systems came from Res’eau-WaterNet, a program that aims to provide safe water to small, rural and Indigenous communitie­s.

“We hope to convince the government to give this technology a chance, to see what it costs, and to change their (funding) policy,” Mohseni said.

 ?? JASON PAYNE/PNG FILES ?? Operations manager Warren Brown says the Lytton First Nation has boiled water ‘since I got here.’ Two of the First Nation’s communitie­s are no longer on boil-water advisories.
JASON PAYNE/PNG FILES Operations manager Warren Brown says the Lytton First Nation has boiled water ‘since I got here.’ Two of the First Nation’s communitie­s are no longer on boil-water advisories.

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