If you're heading to a beach for a cool-down swim, make sure you check if there are any water-quality advisories in your area. A few beaches in New Brunswick have registered high levels of E. coli and enterococci as most of the province is under a heat warning, with temperatures in the low 30s but feeling like up to 40 C. Oak Bay Provincial Park near St. Stephen has had a no-swimming advisory in place for more than a week. Parlee Beach and Murray Beach near Moncton are both also not suitable for swimming.
Murray Corner residents puzzled by sewage lagoon project in provincial park
The clear waves of New Brunswick's Murray Beach Provincial Park draw crowds of swimmers each summer, yet it's located metres away from the campground's sewage lagoon. With the park closed for the season, a project is underway to have tubes and pipes flush that wastewater directly into a marsh. Nearby residents of Murray Corner, about 50 minutes southeast of Moncton, have been questioning the work and worry it could contaminate wells and flow into the ocean.