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Yukon Education Department didn't test school water for lead over the summer as promised

Yukon Education Department didn't test school water for lead over the summer as promised

CBC
Tuesday, September 24, 2024 08:46:49 PM UTC

The Yukon Education Department did not test all school water fixtures for lead over the summer as it promised, with the new deadline for the work now set for the end of the year. 

Department officials, in May, pledged to do the testing and replace any fixtures that did not meet current drinking water standards within two to three months after two Faro students doing a science fair project discovered that their school's water contained an elevated level of lead. 

However, in an emailed statement to CBC News this month, department spokesperson Michael Edwards said the "initial project timeline… did not adequately account for the complexity and scope of the work ahead."

"Key factors, such as the time required to identify human resources, acquire essential materials, navigate the logistical challenges of various school locations, and determining the optimal timing for water testing, were underestimated," Edwards wrote.

"This necessitated a revised schedule to align with more realistic time frames and resource availability."

The department would not provide anyone for an interview. 

The work is now anticipated to be finished by the end of December.

A tender for the water sampling work only closed last week. 

In the meantime, Edwards said that every school in the territory has at least one drinking water source — or, for larger schools, one source per hundred students — that meets Canadian drinking water guidelines, though Faro's Del Van Gorder School and Mayo's J.V. Clark School are receiving bottled water due to the location of the guideline-compliant fixtures in the buildings. 

Drinking water can be contaminated by lead via lead-containing fixtures or solder, an issue particularly prevalent in buildings built before 1990. The department last comprehensively tested school water fixtures for lead in 2018 and 2019, replacing any that didn't meet the drinking water guideline at the time. It reviewed those results this spring after the Faro students' findings and discovered that water from a number of fixtures did not meet the updated, present-day standard. 

While the Yukon's Chief Medical Officer of Health has stated that there are no immediate health risks to consuming water with slightly elevated lead concentrations, the department instructed schools to stop using fountains and sinks that don't meet the current guideline. 

Signs are in place over compliant fixtures identifying them as appropriate drinking water sources, Edwards wrote. He also said the department was able to do limited testing over the summer, including of fixtures at Elijah Smith Elementary School and F.H. Collins Secondary School that were not clearly identified in the 2018 and 2019 test results and all water bottle filling stations at all schools except in Old Crow. 

Fixtures at Centre scolaire secondaire communautaire Paul-Émile Mercier and Whistle Bend Elementary School were fully tested as the schools were both built after 2019. 

Edwards also wrote that the Yukon government was developing a long-term monitoring program to regularly test school drinking water. 

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