Monday, July 6, 2026
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

Double murder probe in B.C. leads to another body

Double murder probe in B.C. leads to another body
RCMP say in a release that officers went to the home of a woman in Naramata on Wednesday in relation to the deaths of Erick and Carlos Fryer, whose bodies were found in a remote location near the town last month.

Double murder probe in B.C. leads to another body

153 COVID19 cases for Thursday

153 COVID19 cases for Thursday
There are currently 1,910 active cases of COVID-19 in the province. Of the active cases, 176 individuals are currently hospitalized, 49 of whom are in ICU.

153 COVID19 cases for Thursday

StatCan says immigrants early victims to COVID-19

StatCan says immigrants early victims to COVID-19
Canadian neighbourhoods where visible minorities live had a COVID-19 death rate about two times higher than areas that had a low proportion of immigrants, says a study from Statistics Canada.

StatCan says immigrants early victims to COVID-19

Watchdog says RCMP breached privacy law

Watchdog says RCMP breached privacy law
In a report today, privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien says there were serious and systemic failings by the RCMP to ensure compliance with the Privacy Act before it gathered information from U.S. firm Clearview AI.

Watchdog says RCMP breached privacy law

Vaccines in G7 spotlight as PM arrives in U.K.

Vaccines in G7 spotlight as PM arrives in U.K.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau landed in the United Kingdom Thursday ahead of a three-day summit with fellow G7 leaders amid growing pressure on Canada to share COVID-19 vaccines with low-income countries.

Vaccines in G7 spotlight as PM arrives in U.K.

Experts concerned about provinces' reopening plans

Experts concerned about provinces' reopening plans
Zero Covid Canada sent a letter Thursday to the premiers of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec "to express our deepest concerns regarding the reopening plans.

Experts concerned about provinces' reopening plans