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Evidence mounts linking Tory policies to e-coli deaths in
Ontario
By Keith Jones
17 June 2000
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Under intense public pressure, Ontario's Tory government has
agreed that a judicial inquiry into the e-coli deaths of at least
seven residents of the rural community of Walkerton can investigate
what role, if any, government policies, procedures and practices
played in the tragedy. The inquiry, which is headed by Justice
Dennis O'Connor, is also empowered to consider any other matters
relevant to the safety of drinking water across the province.
Initially, the Tories resisted demands for a judicial inquiry
into the Walkerton e-coli outbreak, claiming it could best be
investigated by a government-dominated legislative committee.
But over the past four weeks the government has faced a mounting
public outcry, fueled both by the scope of the Walkerton tragedy
and daily press and opposition exposés of the lamentable
state of Ontario's water management system.
Ontario Premier Mike Harris and Environment Minister Dan Newman
stubbornly insist that there is no demonstrable link between the
Walkerton tragedy and the Tories' program of drastic public spending
cuts, deregulation and privatization.
In fact, there is mounting evidence that the Tories' cuts to
the Environment Ministry's budget and workforce contributed both
to the breakdown of Walkerton's water system and the failure of
government authorities to alert the public in a timely fashion.
It is also increasingly apparent that the Harris Tory government
implemented these cuts although they knew they were imperiling
public health. From 1996 on, the government was repeatedly warned
of grave problems in the management of Ontario's drinking water
system. But its only response was to take steps to reduce its
legal liability in case these warnings proved prophetic.
Gutting environmental protection
Problems in Ontario's water management system predate the election
of the Harris Tory government. In the wake of the Walkerton tragedy,
it has been revealed that the province's water and sewage treatment
plants have long functioned under a patchwork and arcane provincial
licensing system. (For example, the Walkerton Public Utility Commission's
license, which dates from 1979, contains no legal obligation that
the water authority have its water tested.) The 1993 decision
of the then-New Democratic Party government to charge for Ministry
water tests resulted in some smaller, rural municipalities reducing
the frequency of their water tests.
But the Harris government's assault on the Environment Ministry
greatly compounded existing problems. Deeming environmental regulation
to be an obstacle to business, the Tories slashed the Environment
Ministry's budget by over 40 percent, to $165 million this year
from $287 million in 1995, and reduced the Ministry's workforce
from 2,400 to 900. Moreover, in recent years much of the Ministry's
energies have been channeled into meeting the Tories' objective
of cutting the number of regulations in half, so as to make Ontario
open for business.
These cuts and the new Ministry priorities have had a directly
adverse impact on water testing. Under the Tories, 42 percent
of the jobs in the Ministry's water testing division have been
eliminated. Whereas in the early years of 1990s water plants were
being inspected by Ministry officials at least once every two
years, now they are inspected on average every four years.
In 1998, a Ministry inspection found that the Walkerton Public
Utility Commission (PUC) had been having problems with e-coli
contamination since 1994. But no doubt due, at least in part,
to staff shortages, the Ministry took no steps to ensure that
the PUC implemented its recommendations for resolving the problems.
Understaffing is also a likely factor in the Ministry's failure
to forward to the medical officer responsible for the Walkerton
area the results of water tests earlier this year that revealed
problems with contamination.
In 1996 the Tories announced the closure of four provincial
water testing labs that had been conducting 400,000 water tests
per year. With just eight weeks notice, the province's more than
600 water authorities were forced to scramble to find private
labs to do the work. When the testing had been performed in-house,
the Environment Ministry was required to inform local health authorities
of any problematic results. But the private labs are not legally
required to inform either the Ministry or health officials of
adverse test results.
This regulatory flexibility undoubtedly made the
Walkerton crisis much worse. The private lab that discovered that
Walkerton's water system was contaminated did not forward the
results to either the Ministry or the local health officer. This
left sole responsibility for dealing with the crisis in the hands
of Walkerton PUC's tiny, nine-member staff.
Ultimately, it was Dr. Murray McQuigge, the local medical officer,
acting independently of the PUC and the testing lab, who ordered
a boil-water advisory, after having his own water tests done.
Thus, for three or possibly four days after the initial test had
revealed the e-coli contamination, Walkerton's residents continued
to drink water infested with a potentially lethal bacteria. (To
this day, the various inquires have been unable to conclusively
determine the timeline.)
Twenty-four hours before McQuigge issued his advisory, the
Environment Ministry's Spills Action Center received an anonymous
call warning of problems at the Walkerton water treatment plant,
but the undermanned unit failed to pursue the matter.
Although conclusive proof has yet to be uncovered, it is considered
highly likely that the source of the e-coli contamination was
manure runoff from local industrial livestock operations. Environmentalists
and health experts, including Dr. McQuigge, have been warning
for some time that the proliferation of farms with large concentrations
of cattle or pigs constituted a potential health hazard that,
at the very least, called for greater government regulation.
The Tory government, meanwhile, has been promoting unregulated
industrial livestock production, notwithstanding a Health Canada
report directly linking the high number of e-coli outbreaks in
the Walkerton region to high densities of cattle. In 1998 the
Harris Tory government passed the so-called Right-to-Farm Act
to prevent local governments from placing restrictions on industrial
livestock operations.
Tories dismissed warnings
No less damning is the Tories' dismissal of repeated warnings
from local officials, the union representing the Environment Ministry's
workers, and the Ministry itself of severe problems in the province's
water management system. In June 1998, the town of Walkerton wrote
the premier to urge the province to resume responsibility for
water testing and to tell him it had passed a resolution to that
effect. The Premier's Office responded with a curt acknowledgment
of receipt of the letter. We receive a large number of these
resolutions from municipalities every day, explained a Harris
aide.
In 1997, at least two memos were produced within the Ministry
that warned of problems from the privatization of water testing
and the devolving of responsibilities for managing water treatment
plants to the municipalities. (Prior to 1997 the water plants
in many municipalities, but not Walkerton's, were owned by the
province.) The second of the memos, dated November 14, 1997, warned
that a number of small municipalities do not comply with
minimum monitoring and reporting requirements.... Cost was the
main reason for non-compliance.
Also in 1997, senior Ministry officials spent much of a two-day
meeting discussing, according to a participant, how to protect
themselves from legal liability in case of environmental catastrophe
as a result of increased workload or due to staff reductions.
In January of this year, senior Ministry officials prepared
a new memo that called for changes in the monitoring of water,
some moving further in the direction of deregulation and others
seeking to ensure that the Ministry would be informed of adverse
test results. In response to complaints from smaller municipalities,
the memo urged a loosening of requirements governing the frequency
of tests.
Environment Minister Dan Newman, who only took the post in
March, denies ever seeing the memo and has argued that this was
not out of the ordinary, as it was only a draft document.
But Gary Gallon, a senior policy advisor to a previous Liberal
Environment Minister, has said the January memo was of the type
that would likely have been discussed by high-ranking government
officials, and not just in the Environment Ministry. Draft,
he explains, is a term frequently given to controversial documents,
so that ministers and senior bureaucrats can later distance themselves
from them.
At the beginning of the Walkerton crisis, Premier Harris claimed
his Tories would never have cut a single dollar or job if they
thought it would impact adversely on Ontarians; the Tories' only
concern was making the government work better. Now government
documents are spelling out in black and white that the Tories
persevered with the gutting of the Environment Ministry in the
face of mounting warnings of the dangers to public health.
Further evidence of the Tories' culpability in the Walkerton
deaths is provided by their self-serving response to this crisis.
So flagrant have been Harris's attempts to shift blame from the
government onto others, even the pro-Tory Globe and Mail
has accused Harris of ducking and weaving. Time and again, most
recently when he denounced Walkerton for not upgrading its water
system, Harris has been caught saying things that proved to be
untrue. Only popular pressure compelled the Tories to call a judicial
inquiry, a tactic that in Canada has traditionally served as a
government device for defusing a political crisis. Clearly the
Tories fear further damning revelations.
On June 13 the press leaked a Tory cabinet discussion paper
that outlines a scheme to compel municipalities to privatize services,
including water and sewage, transit and ambulance services. The
paper calls for new legislation this autumn to force municipalities
to privatize services unless they can demonstrate their ability
to provide them more effectively than the private sector.
Municipal Affairs Minister Tony Clement subsequently defended
the document, saying nothing that happened in Walkerton suggested
the private sector could not manage water systems. But as the
storm of protest grew, Harris went before reporters to deny that
the Tories were considering forcing municipalities to privatize
their water and sewage systems.
The next day, June 14, in the face of opposition calls for
the hiring of one hundred new Environment Ministry staff, Harris
said it would be presumptuous to prejudge the results
of the judicial inquiry. The truth, however, is that the Harris
government came to power with a right-wing agenda based on the
glorification of the capitalist market as the supreme regulator
of human affairs, so as to justify the dismantling of public and
social services and the enrichment of the few at the expense of
the many.
See Also:
WSWS report from scene of e-coli
deaths: Walkerton, Ontario residents demand answers
[10 June 2000]
Canada: Ontario government bends to pressure
for a public inquiry into e-coli deaths
[3 June 2000]
Seven dead from e-coli contamination
in Ontario, Canada [1 June 2000]
Ontario:
the fight against the Harris Government
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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