Twenty years after her family became seriously ill from a water-borne parasite, Christine Greer still doesn’t trust what comes out of the tap. The family of four were among an estimated 7,000 people in North Battleford — about half the city’s population — who spent the spring of 2001 incapacitated by severe flu-like symptoms. “I shared a home with my nephew and his wife and my great-nephew,” Greer, 47, recalls. “Even the baby was sick, severely sick. It was a little bit traumatic.
Healthy rivers: How DNA tool can help keep tabs on freshwater quality
Oneida Nation of the Thames tap water different than neighbouring non-Indigenous communities
ONEIDA NATION OF THE THAMES — Jennifer George’s home sits on a gravel road that separates this Indigenous community near London, Ont., from the neighbouring township of Southwold. On George’s side of the road, virtually no one trusts the drinking water that flows from the Thames River to their homes. Many have the same 18-litre blue jugs that line the floor of George’s kitchen, ubiquitous sources of water for drinking and cooking.