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Investigation
of E. coli outbreak continues
WALKERTON, ONTARIO
— Canadian police and health officials are still
investigating how wells in
this town 90 miles west of Toronto were infected with E. coli, which
has
sickened hundreds and killed at least five people. Police also are
investigating
whether local officials broke laws by failing to report water problems
immediately.
Meanwhile, Ontario's
environmental minister, Dan
Newman, announced new regulations that would require all of the
province's
municipalities to use accredited water-testing labs and to inform the
government
when hiring a new, private testing firm, according to The Associated
Press.
Water plants also would be
reviewed and certified
every three years, and the ministry would clarify procedures requiring
laboratories to notify health officials, city officials and the
environment
ministry of irregularities.
As of Sunday, the number of
people getting sick
from the bacteria found in the water supply has decreased. However,
officials
said several of the hospitalized patients may still die.
E. coli, spread through human
and animal feces,
may have entered Walkerton's wells in flooding that followed a storm
May 12.
City officials said that a chlorinating system on one of the town's two
main
wells was malfunctioning for weeks before residents started getting
sick.
A provincial water agency took
control of the
local water utility last week after it was disclosed that the utility
knew as
early as May 18 about the contamination. A boil-water order was issued
for
Walkerton May 21 after residents reported illnesses.
One class action lawsuit
already has been filed,
accusing local officials of failing to promptly notify Walkerton
residents of
the contamination.
Two nearby communities, Wingham
and Freelton,
also have found E. coli contamination in water supplies. In Wingham,
the
contamination was found in a school, which has since been shut down.
Freelton
was placed under a boil-water order after traces of the bacteria was
found in
its water.
However, neither case
apparently is linked to the
Walkerton contamination.
Trucks carrying bottled water
moved through
Walkerton Sunday, with volunteers carrying the donated cases to
doorsteps in
some areas.
Copyright 2000 National
Trade Publications, Inc.
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