2017—2018 · Vol. 45 No. 4

Update

2017—2018 · Vol. 45 No. 4

Update

 
Publications

Health and Safety Information Bulletin—Lead in the Drinking Water

Since 2007, the Ontario Safe Water Drinking Act (Reg. 243/07 Schools, Private Schools and Day Nurseries) has required school boards to flush the cold water plumbing on a daily or weekly basis, maintain flushing logs, take annual water samples, and report drinking water test results to the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change (MOECC). Some of these results were recently posted on the Ministry website and have attracted media attention.

The Ministry of Education has written a memo to Directors of Education stating, “As part of our ongoing commitment to transparency, the Ministry of Education expects parents and guardians are to be made aware in a timely manner of all situations where a lead exceedance has been detected in the drinking water of a school or child care centre, and how the exceedance will be addressed.”

On July 1, 2017, the regulation was amended to require all school boards to take a water sample from every tap used for consumption and food preparation and from all fountains used by children under the age of 18. This phased-in sampling of all required sample points will be completed by the January 1, 2022 deadline.

The Ontario drinking water quality standard, based on the National Health Canada guideline, is 10 micrograms per litre. Lead is a naturally occurring toxic heavy metal with a number of applications. Lead in drinking water is likely dissolved from the solder used in older plumbing. Even small amounts of lead can be harmful, especially to infants, young children and pregnant women. Long term exposure to lower levels of lead may cause developmental delays and other deficits. If you are concerned about lead exposure, your doctor can conduct a simple blood test to measure your blood lead level.

You can view this Information Bulletin, and many others, on the OSSTF/FEESO provincial website.

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