Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

New B.C. Rates For Groundwater Introduced, To Take Effect In 2016

The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2015 11:24 AM
    VICTORIA — Companies will pay little more than a toonie to bottle as much groundwater as can fill a 25-metre swimming pool when new fees take effect in British Columbia next year.
     
    The levy is part of a rate schedule introduced by the Ministry of Environment, which until recently has not charged for the use of groundwater.
     
    Household wells through B.C. will not require a licence or pay a fee, but the government will charge others between two cents and $2.25 for every one-million litres of groundwater, or enough to fill the pool.
     
    The fees mean a household using municipal water may pay an extra loonie or toonie annually, and a farm growing hay in Kamloops may see their costs jump from $90 to $128 to irrigate a 16-hectare field.
     
    But the highest rate has been set for water-bottling companies that will pay $2.25 per million litres.
     
    The ministry says the fees are meant to cover the costs of the May 2014 Water Sustainability Act, which comes into force next year.
     
    "British Columbia is blessed with an abundant water supply that our government is committed to preserving for future generations," says Environment Minister Mary Polak in a media release.
     
    "The new fee structure will ensure fairness and affordability are cornerstones of our modernized water legislation."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP doctored flight logs and flew overweight, says integrity commissioner

    RCMP doctored flight logs and flew overweight, says integrity commissioner
    OTTAWA — The federal integrity commissioner says RCMP pilots doctored flight manifests in order to fly over-loaded aircraft, but dismissed several other serious allegations from a whistleblower for lack of evidence.

    RCMP doctored flight logs and flew overweight, says integrity commissioner

    Crown witness testifies Magnotta in touch with reality during Lin's slaying

    Crown witness testifies Magnotta in touch with reality during Lin's slaying
    MONTREAL — The Crown's expert forensic psychiatrist says even if Luka Rocco Magnotta was suffering from schizophrenia, he knew what he was doing the night Jun Lin was killed.

    Crown witness testifies Magnotta in touch with reality during Lin's slaying

    Pharmacy tracking could help curb opioid abuse in Newfoundland: police, minister

    Pharmacy tracking could help curb opioid abuse in Newfoundland: police, minister
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Police say abuse of prescription pain relievers is a huge problem for Newfoundland and Labrador but it lacks a crucial antidote: a provincewide computer tracking system.

    Pharmacy tracking could help curb opioid abuse in Newfoundland: police, minister

    Despite caucus revolt, Manitoba's NDP government survives non-confidence vote

    Despite caucus revolt, Manitoba's NDP government survives non-confidence vote
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba's troubled NDP government survived a non-confidence motion in the legislature Monday, despite divisions within caucus.

    Despite caucus revolt, Manitoba's NDP government survives non-confidence vote

    Northern aboriginals start court fight with federal government over resources

    Northern aboriginals start court fight with federal government over resources
    Northern aboriginals are expected to fire the first shot Wednesday in a fight against the federal government's plan to centralize decision-making over resource development.

    Northern aboriginals start court fight with federal government over resources

    Police make arrest in decades-old B.C. murders

    Police make arrest in decades-old B.C. murders
    RCMP have arrested a 67-year-old Ontario man for the separate murders of two young girls who vanished in southern British Columbia almost 40 years ago

    Police make arrest in decades-old B.C. murders