Tri-County Vanguard

Water quality research project ‘a turning point in the community’

- KATHY JOHNSON THECOASTGU­ARD.CA

A public informatio­n session heard last week about how there are still some people who cannot use their water for the basics. They can’t drink it. They can’t shower in it. They can’t even wash vegetables in it.

But boots are on the ground for a two-year applied research project into water quality issues in the Shelburne African Nova Scotia community.

The project is being led by Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC) Research Scientist Dr. Etienne Mfoumou and his Engineered Technologi­es Applied Research Team. Acadia University, Dalhousie University through ENRICH (Environmen­tal Noxiousnes­s, Racial Inequities & Community Health), the South End Environmen­tal Injustice Society (SEED) and Rural Water Watch are also involved in the project: “Pilot Scale Study of Potable Water using Ultrafiltr­ation Technology in the Shelburne African Nova Scotia Community.”

With funding for the study awarded in June through the Social Sciences and Humanitari­an Research Council, it’s “still very early. We’re only at month four,” said Dwayne MacLeod community innovation lead with NSCC at a public informatio­n session on Oct. 18 at the Shelburne Campus. The study will include conducting “water testing and assess the specifics of the results and address the feasibilit­y of using ultra filtration technology to improve drinking water challenges in a cost-effective manner.”

Dr. Mfoumou said the project is “highly collaborat­ive work” that will include making new connection­s, acquiring new resources, informing new perspectiv­es, implementi­ng new practices, and bring the community and research team together in order to research the social and economical challenges.

“We’re using innovation to positively impact the community, but we can’t pretend to be doing that alone. We have to do it with the community,” said Dr. Mfoumou. “The project will lead to recommenda­tions that any partner looking at the issue will have access to. By bringing results to the community and stakeholde­rs along the way, we will foster a better understand of the project and issues involved and be ready to work together as to how the community can move forward.”

NEEDED ANSWERS BEING SEARCHED FOR

Louise Delisle, president of SEED, said she feels the project is “a turning point in the community.”

“We are working together as a team to ensure we have good clean water. For the past two years SEED has discussed how best to move forward is to grow our work in evidence-based research. We’re trying to research what will make us healthy. Where do we start, how do we do it, how do we work with other people to get it done?” she said.

“Our priority is community health. Without clean water how can we be healthy? There are still many unanswered questions,” Delisle said, adding answers will be found in research. “I hope these evidence-based strategies will be used to improve health outcomes and the prevalence of chronic disease in the black community. Clean water is the first and most important step in the process. I feel with this project we are being pushed ahead to a healthier community.”

Additional research over the next few years will also include a history of the Shelburne town landfill which operated from 1949 to 1990 in the south end of town in a predominan­tly black and poor community. With residentia­l, industrial, and sometimes medical waste from People listen to one of the speakers at the public informatio­n session on Oct. 18 at the Shelburne Campus outlining the goals, objectives and progress of a twoyear study started in June that will be looking at water quality issues in the Shelburne African Nova Scotia community. Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC) Research Scientist Dr. Etienne Mfoumou is the lead for the Pilot Scale Study of Potable Water using Ultrafiltr­ation Technology in the Shelburne African Nova Scotia Community.

throughout eastern Shelburne County burned at the dump over the years, SEED feels the dump is a contributi­ng factor to the high rates of cancer and health issues they’ve seen among the people who lived close to it.

“This summer we had a hard summer,” said Delisle. “A lot of people had dry wells and still are in hard shape. We did some water testing and the tests didn’t come back very good. There are still people in the community who cannot drink their water. There are people in the community who cannot even wash their vegetables or shower in their water. It is a very dire strait when don’t have water, and when you think about where we live, we should have good clean water at all times.”

Delisle said the applied research project will also look at the impact on property values due to the proximity of the town dump, the ongoing health impact in the community and increase the community’s capacity for water and soil testing.

“There’s an African proverb, if you want to go quickly you go alone, if you want to go far you go together,” she said. “The more partners we have the better off we are and the healthier the community is. We are today ahead of many other black communitie­s in Nova Scotia because of our partnershi­ps.”

ENVIRONMEN­TAL RACISM

“Environmen­tal racism refers to the disproport­ionate location of industrial polluters such as landfills, trash incinerato­rs, coal plants, toxic waste facilities and other environmen­tally hazardous activities near to communitie­s of colour and the working poor,” states the ENRICH project website. “It is also characteri­zed

by the lack of organizati­on and political power that these communitie­s hold for advocating against the siting of industrial polluters, the uneven negative impacts of environmen­tal procedures, the uneven negative impacts of environmen­tal policies, and the disproport­ionate access to environmen­tal services such as garbage removal.”

Led by Dr. Ingrid Waldon, the ENRICH Project was establishe­d in 2012 to address the health and socio-economic effects of environmen­tal racism in Mi’kmaw and African Nova Scotian communitie­s. In 2015, ENRICH collaborat­ed with MLA Lenore Zann to develop the first private members bill to address environmen­tal racism in Canada. The bill, entitled Bill 111: An Act to Address Environmen­tal Racism in Nova Scotia, was introduced at the Legislatur­e in 2015. The bill made it Louise Delisle, president of the South End Environmen­tal Injustice Society (SEED) speaks at the informatio­n session at the NSCC Shelburne Campus about the Pilot Scale Study of Potable Water using Ultrafiltr­ation Technology in the Shelburne African Nova Scotia Community. Delisle said she feels the research project is “a turning point in the community.”

to second reading but wasn’t passed by the Liberals.

On Sept. 13, Zann, who is the NDP’s environmen­t spokespers­on, introduced another private member’s bill on the same issue. Bill 31, An Act to Redress Environmen­tal Racism, calls for the establishm­ent of a panel to explore environmen­tal racism in the province and provide recommenda­tions to address issues that communitie­s are becoming more vocal about such as health concerns and the lowering of property values in communitie­s where there is an environmen­tal racism aspect of some kind.

“Within one year of the coming into force of this Act, the panel shall consult the public, on a Provincewi­de basis, about the issue of environmen­tal racism, with special

emphasis given to consultati­on with the African Nova Scotian, First Nations and Acadian communitie­s, and provide a report to the Ministers that sets out its findings and recommenda­tions,” reads the Bill in part.

“This is a major thing and a key issue for the south end of Shelburne,” said NDP Leader Gary Burrill during a visit to Shelburne County last week. The establishm­ent of a panel as outlined in Bill 31 “would move us to a place where this problem is being addressed,” said Burrill, with a panel, he said, making recommenda­tions to government “about incidents of environmen­tal racism and redress for environmen­tal racism as we know has been experience­d and is being experience­d around the province.”

 ?? KATHY JOHNSON PHOTO ??
KATHY JOHNSON PHOTO
 ?? KATHY JOHNSON PHOTO ?? Closed on Dec. 3, 2016, the Shelburne Town Dump operated from 1949 to 1990 in the south end of town in a predominan­tly black and poor community. Residentia­l, industrial, and sometimes medical waste from throughout eastern Shelburne County was burned at the dump over the years.
KATHY JOHNSON PHOTO Closed on Dec. 3, 2016, the Shelburne Town Dump operated from 1949 to 1990 in the south end of town in a predominan­tly black and poor community. Residentia­l, industrial, and sometimes medical waste from throughout eastern Shelburne County was burned at the dump over the years.
 ?? KATHY JOHNSON PHOTO ??
KATHY JOHNSON PHOTO
 ?? KATHY JOHNSON PHOTO ??
KATHY JOHNSON PHOTO

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