Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

British Columbia

Drinking water on First Nations reserves an ongoing problem in B.C., says professor

An engineering professor and co-founder of a program that works with small communities to find solutions for access to water says remoteness, small populations and a lack of capacity are hurting many First Nation reserves when it comes to water.

In February, 26 communities were under boil water advisories some for over 10 years

Many First Nations reserve across Canada face challenges when it comes to water. People who live on the Kahkewistahaw First Nation, 150 kilometres east of Regina, have had to walk or drive to the water treatment plant to fill jugs with drinkable filtered water since June 2015. (Roxanna Woloshyn/CBC )

The deplorable state of drinking water on many First Nations reserves in B.C. is well documented.

At the end of February 2016, 26 communities in B.C.were under boil water advisoriessome of them dating back 10 years.

"The issue and the challenge is that even though that water comes from pristine sources, some of those sources are susceptible to microbial contamination,"UBC engineering professorMadjid Mohsenitold On The Coast host Stephen Quinn.

"Those communities are often very remote much of the funding needs to be paid by theratepayersor the users, and when you have only tens of people living there, it's very difficult for them to afford installing a treatment system."

Mohseni is a co-founder of RES'EAU-WaterNET, a program that works directly with small communities to find solutions for access to water.

Madjid Mohseni, a professor of engineering at UBC, is a co-founder of RES'EAU-WaterNET, a program that works directly with small communities to find solutions for access to water. (ubc.ca)
His work focuses on working with communities, identifying their concerns and finding local human capacity for water treatment.

He and his students try to present various water treatment options to the communities to see which ones would work best given their human and financial capacity.

"'One solution fits all' does not work," he said. "Depending on what is in the water, the type of treatment that is required would be different."

Mohseni will be presenting on his work March9 as part of the UBC Centennial Emerging Research Workshop on Water.


To hear the full story, click the audio labelled:'One size fits all' approach won't solve First Nations water crisis: professor