Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Farmers may soon feel the pinch of drinking water plans

Farmers near Kitchener and Paris may soon feel the pinch of regulations designed to protect well water.

Both have been identified as facing a risk from farm manure and the application of “non-agricultural source material” which could be sewage sludge.

A well at Mannheim, on the western outskirts of Kitchener, has tested as having more than the limit of 10 parts per million nitrates.

They could be coming from manure or septic systems in the village, but more likely from both, says a report to the Lake Erie Source Water Protection Committee.

A well on the Bethel Road, near Paris, is in a similar position, but there is also a mention of a potential contamination from farm pesticides and also from two landfill sites.

The village of Richmond in the municipality of Bayham in the Long Point Region also has a well that is deemed at risk of pollution from manure and “non-agricultural source material.”


The reports will be considered by the committee at its next meeting Feb. 5 and might lead to approval of recommendations that staff be authorized to follow up.