Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan City Under Precautionary Boil-Water Advisory Due To 'Process Error'

The Canadian Press, 13 Aug, 2015 02:03 PM
    NORTH BATTLEFORD, Sask. — Residents of a Saskatchewan city are being told to boil their tap water as a precaution because it might be contaminated.
     
    The Saskatchewan Water Security Agency says the entire city of North Battleford, with a population of about 14,000, is under a precautionary drinking-water advisory.
     
    The advisory says all drinking water — as well as water used for dishwashing, washing fruit and vegetables and brushing teeth — must be brought to a roiling boil for one minute.
     
    "A precautionary drinking-water advisory is if there's a potential for a contaminant or something to happen to the system, not necessarily that it has," water agency spokesman Patrick Boyle said Wednesday.
     
    "An emergency boil-water order means that a contaminant has been confirmed and has entered the system, so in this case with North Battleford, it's just a potential at this point."
     
    Dustin MacDonald, the city's acting communications manager, said partially treated water spilled into treated water at one of North Battleford's treatment plants on Tuesday afternoon. That happened for six minutes before alarms went off and the plant was shut down.
     
    "The partially treated water went through the filter system as well as the ultraviolet disinfection system ... the accepted engineering travel time would indicate that the partially treated water was caught within the water treatment plant, but that needs to be scientifically proven that this water did not reach the water distribution system."
     
    Engineers and city staff were doing tests and analyzing data on Wednesday to determine how far the water got, said MacDonald.
     
    "Safety of our residents and visitors is our main concern, and we are working closely with the Saskatchewan Water Security Agency and the Prairie North Regional Health Authority," the city said in a news release late Wednesday afternoon.
     
    "We encourage people to comply with the precautionary drinking water advisory that was issued. Additional water quality testing is underway. At this point it appears it will take two or three days to ensure safe drinking water through further actions and monitoring."
     
    The city said operational error was the cause.
     
    About 8,000 litres of water goes through the system in six minutes — enough to fill about eight hot tubs, MacDonald said.
     
    More than 7,000 North Battleford residents became sick in 2001 when a parasite called cryptosporidium entered the water supply during routine maintenance of a chemical filter.
     
    Lab tests confirmed 361 cases of illness. No one died.
     
    An inquiry into the outbreak concluded the city systematically failed to recognize its responsibilities for the water supply.
     
    An inquiry report also criticized the province's Environment Department as being an ''inadequate and ineffective'' regulator. The city's water treatment plant had not been inspected by the province for 10 years.
     
    At least 800 people who sued over the outbreak reached out-of-court settlements paid by the city and the Saskatchewan government.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver's Celebrity Photographer In Ryan Reynolds Hit And Run Charged

    Vancouver's Celebrity Photographer In Ryan Reynolds Hit And Run Charged
    Three charges were sworn before a justice of the peace against Richard Fedyck, a 52-year-old paparazzo arrested after the movie star was allegedly struck in the parkade of a luxury hotel.

    Vancouver's Celebrity Photographer In Ryan Reynolds Hit And Run Charged

    Hearing Begins In Shooting Death Near Salmon Arm, B.C., Elementary School

    Hearing Begins In Shooting Death Near Salmon Arm, B.C., Elementary School
    Tyler Myers was killed in a schoolyard in Salmon Arm in November 2008 and his body was discovered the following day.

    Hearing Begins In Shooting Death Near Salmon Arm, B.C., Elementary School

    Remains Of Aboriginal Woman Missing For 10 Years Discovered In Alberta Woods

    Remains Of Aboriginal Woman Missing For 10 Years Discovered In Alberta Woods
    Delores Dawn Brower, who went by the nickname Spider, was a sex trade worker last seen hitching a ride in Edmonton in 2004.

    Remains Of Aboriginal Woman Missing For 10 Years Discovered In Alberta Woods

    Brother Gives Victim Impact Statement At Bus Shelter Death Sentencing

    Brother Gives Victim Impact Statement At Bus Shelter Death Sentencing
    Ron Lawrence read a victim impact statement today at a sentencing hearing for two men who pleaded guilty in the death of his brother Harley, a 62-year-old man who was homeless.

    Brother Gives Victim Impact Statement At Bus Shelter Death Sentencing

    Bill To Make Nov. 11 'Legal' Holiday Stalled In Parliament, Unlikely To Survive

    OTTAWA — An NDP private member's bill meant to formally recognize Remembrance Day as a "legal" holiday appears to be dying a slow, silent death as the sun begins to set on the current session of Parliament.

    Bill To Make Nov. 11 'Legal' Holiday Stalled In Parliament, Unlikely To Survive

    Stephen Harper's Boastful Hockey Bet Outshone Many Other World Leader Tweets

    Stephen Harper's Boastful Hockey Bet Outshone Many Other World Leader Tweets
    OTTAWA — Plenty of diplomatic deals get done on the margins of global get-togethers, but one conducted on Twitter in 2014 made Prime Minister Stephen Harper a digital star among his fellow world leaders.

    Stephen Harper's Boastful Hockey Bet Outshone Many Other World Leader Tweets