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It has been a very busy spring! I hate to say this because everyone I know has a demanding schedule and full calendar. But, between marking final assignments and exams; creating meaningful report card comments; writing for rabble, Raise the Hammer, herizons magazine and biweekly editorial meetings for The Anvil newspaper; as well as a few well-deserved trips to art galleries, the symphony and local plays, spring is a blur.

Then, the heat wave hit making it impossible to work in the garden even if I did scrape together some spare time. Add to that, this past week was spent collaboratively working with supporters and the City of Burlington to save the milkweed in my front garden and across the city.

All this to say, I just spent a few glorious hours weeding and mulching my front garden. I have to admit I thought I’d accomplish a lot more before heat and fatigue wore me out. In fact, if I didn’t know better, I’d swear someone has been throwing grass seed into my garden and onto my boulevard, all of which I have to delicately remove by hand so I don’t disturb my plants.

But, gardening brings on an exhaustion that makes you feel great especially when you harvest a surprising summer’s worth of aromatic garlic — talk about local! And, a shout out to my patient neighbours who I know recognize not everyone has the same demands and schedules to adhere to. A little give and take and understanding goes a long way.

Gardening gives me time to think about things. Today, I was thinking just how far we’ve come. In 2003, I was trying to get a pesticide bylaw passed in Burlington. I was being mentored by actionists from the Oakville Community Centre For Peace, Ecology and Human Rights, Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment (CAPE), Ministry of the Environment (MOE), Toronto Environmental Alliance (TEA), and countless other well-informed groups and individuals.

Burlington was dragging its feet waiting to see if Toronto was going to be sued over its pesticide ban. Halton Region was also hoping the provincial government would act on this issue before they were forced to — and that’s just what happened. Ontario’s cosmetic pesticides ban went into effect April 22, 2009.

Fast forward nine years and the City of Burlington took less than a week to change a redundant bylaw that classified milkweed as a weed in need of eradication. Thanks to overwhelming public knowledge, research and encouragement from across Southern Ontario, milkweed will flourish and nourish monarch caterpillars across Burlington. So, I’d like to encourage environmentalists and actionists to continue riding the wave of this momentum!

Many of you will know I’m an avid supporter of the work of Wellington Water Watchers (WWW). In 2007, WWW formed in response to the hypocrisy of water use in the town of Elora. At the time, drought conditions meant local residents were experiencing water shortages. Yet, the provincial and local governments were promoting the development of the Grand River Raceway which would definitely tax this already overburdened water supply.

Since that time, WWW has expanded its water activism to include asking the provincial government to place a permanent moratorium on water extraction for the purposes of bottling. As chair Mike Nagy observes, “Bottled water is a symbol of water inequality not luxury. This includes First Nations reserves where water contamination is common place. Yet, instead of timely fixes to the problems with equipment and training, bottled water has become institutionalized in too many cases. But, really the question all Canadians should be asking is, why is the water contaminated in the first place?”

WWW acknowledge that water is a basic human right. Their campaign, Water for Life, Not Profit, focused on Nestles Aberfoyle plant, which has pumped more than 1.1 billion liters of water since its permit expired 24 months ago.

This is only one of two permits Nestle has in the area. Erin’s permit expired almost a year ago, but Nestles continues bottling water from that well. Together, these two permits allow Nestle to pump up to 4.7 million litres of water each and every day.

Nestle purchased a third well in Elora after outbidding the local community of Centre Wellington. A moratorium currently prevents Nestle from pumping water from this well. And, therein lies the concern. Now that Doug Ford is Premier will these moratoriums be upheld and enforced or will it be business as usual in the name of corporate profit?

Supporters of WWW are expressing real fear that Doug Ford and his government may hand our water over to corporations. There is a sense Ford will side with corporations and support private profits over protecting water and environmental rights. There is also genuine concern that Ford will ignore Indigenous rights. Finally, many WWW members dread Ford will reduce the number of staff employed to protect natural resources and the environment.

WWW is planning for the next phase of the Nestle campaign and they’re hoping you’ll join in on the conversations to strategize and develop tactics to fit these new circumstances.

WWW also see this an opportunity for a clear fight for what is right. Water must stay within the public trust and not become a marketable entity.

WWW believes water connects us all and this is an incredibly potent time to mobilize neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood along lines of caring.

On Wednesday, July 17, WWW invites you to attend a meeting to discuss the future of water under the provincial leadership of Doug Ford. Join WWW members from 6 to 8 p.m. at 42 Carden St., Guelph, Ontario. Located in the newly renovated community space located between 39 Carden and Eric the Baker, WWW will be meeting on the 4th floor.

If you value the importance of keeping water within the public trust then come and add your voice to the conversation.

In the meantime, take immediate action to support WWW’s most recent campaign the Guelph-Eramosa Township (GET) action to protect Guelph-Eramosa Township’s source groundwater. Please make the time to sign the GET petition and tell GET Mayor Chris White and GET Councillors to uphold the existing Zoning By-law and decline the Xinyi Canada Glass development application. 

Check out the GET website and familiarize yourself with the WWW’s advocacy for the responsible use of communal water, air and land in Guelph-Eramosa Township and surrounding areas.

Then, take a good hard look at your municipal and regional government. Are they active environmental stewards? Monday October 22, 2018 municipal elections will be held across the province. This is your opportunity to ask all mayoral, municipal and regional councillors, and school trustee candidates how they intend to uphold and protect our human rights to clean water held within the public trust; sewage and water treatment that remains owned by the municipality; clean air; and responsible land stewardship that will improve and strengthen our communal and global environment.

Then, remember to GET out and vote!

Image: Avelino Zepeda/flickr
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Doreen Nicoll

Doreen Nicoll is weary of the perpetual misinformation and skewed facts that continue to concentrate wealth, power and decision making in the hands of a few to the detriment of the many. As a freelance...