Thursday, June 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Long-term water advisory lifted for First Nation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Sep, 2021 03:22 PM
  • Long-term water advisory lifted for First Nation

SHOAL LAKE, ONTARIO, CANADA - An Indigenous community on the Manitoba-Ontario boundary is welcoming clean, running water for the first time in nearly 25 years.

Shoal Lake 40 First Nation celebrated the opening Wednesday of its new water treatment plant as well as a new school.

The First Nation advised residents on social media that tap water from a central public water system was safe to drink and use for household purposes.

The federal government said a long-term boil-water advisory for the community, which was issued in 1998 and was one of the longest in Canada, had been lifted.

Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller was in the community for the celebration.

"The people of Shoal Lake 40 have fought hard for this day," Miller said on Twitter.

The First Nation was cut off from the outside world more than a century ago during construction of an aqueduct that supplies Winnipeg with its drinking water. The community's land became a man-made island only accessible by a ferry in the summer and a dangerous ice road in the winter.

The community advocated for years for an all-season transportation link and, in 2019, what became known as "Freedom Road" was completed.

Construction on the water treatment plant began soon after.

The news reached the campaign trail when Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau spoke Tuesday about the advisory lifting. He said his government is still committed to ending long-term boil water advisories, a promise the Liberals first made during the 2015 election campaign.

"Indigenous people who have lived on that land for generations and millennia can't drink the water. We're fixing that," Trudeau said.

Numbers from Indigenous Services Canada from Aug. 28 show there were still 51 long-term drinking water advisories in 32 communities. Some 109 advisories had been lifted since November 2015.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta offers $100 to get fully vaccinated

Alberta offers $100 to get fully vaccinated
Premier Jason Kenney, two months after declaring victory over COVID-19, is now offering $100 to Albertans who aren't fully vaccinated to curb nation-leading cases of the illness that have again pushed the province's hospitals to the brink.

Alberta offers $100 to get fully vaccinated

Destructive B.C. wildfire being held

Destructive B.C. wildfire being held
The emergency operations centre for the central Okanagan has said at least 78 properties west of Okanagan Lake sustained significant damage, in addition to properties destroyed in Monte Lake and Westwold on the fire's opposite flank.

Destructive B.C. wildfire being held

Richmond RCMP arrest robbery suspect who allegedly used a knife to threaten a convenience store clerk.

Richmond RCMP arrest robbery suspect who allegedly used a knife to threaten a convenience store clerk.
At approximately 11:00 pm on August 22, 2021 Richmond RCMP attended the 9000 block of Williams Rd for a robbery in progress. According to the victim, a man entered the store then allegedly produced a knife and demanded money. 

Richmond RCMP arrest robbery suspect who allegedly used a knife to threaten a convenience store clerk.

RCMP investigate death of child in B.C.

RCMP investigate death of child in B.C.
RCMP are investigating the death of a child who sustained serious injuries at a campground in southeast British Columbia earlier this week. They say officers responded along with the provincial ambulance service on Monday to a report of an unresponsive child at a campground east of Creston.    

RCMP investigate death of child in B.C.

671 COVID19 cases for Friday

671 COVID19 cases for Friday
There are 5,872 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 160,268 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 215 individuals are in hospital and 118 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

671 COVID19 cases for Friday

Doctor frustrated with 'arrogance' of unvaccinated

Doctor frustrated with 'arrogance' of unvaccinated
Dr. Steven Fedder, who works in the emergency room of a hospital in Richmond, B.C., said he has run out of patience for people whose stance against vaccines has larger societal implications.    

Doctor frustrated with 'arrogance' of unvaccinated