Thousands of Island Lake residents still haul their drinking water in pails from a community tap and rely on outhouses or latrine buckets that some dump on the ground close to home. What will it take for these Manitobans to secure what the United Nations recognizes as an essential human right to safe water and sanitation?
Articles
-
The worst of the bargain
ISLAND LAKE — “A hundred years of disappointment,” a banner might have read at last year’s centennial celebration of the treaty that brought the indigenous people of Island Lake into a “trust” relationship with the Canadian government.
-
Three centuries of hard times, and counting
1700s: Indigenous people migrated into the Island Lake region, according to Victor Harper of Wasagamack, who leads cultural awareness workshops.
-
When will almost all Island Lake homes have running water?
Oscar McDougall, associate director of capital projects for St. Theresa Point First Nation, said he's "semi-optimistic" that either piped water or storage cisterns will be in most homes within his community in five years.
-
Right to clean water
Hint to First Nations leaders in Island Lake: After you're finished lugging water home and digging a new hole for your outhouse, and if you're not busy giving your kids and grandpa a sponge bath, you might want to think about hiring a lawyer.
-
Tongue-tied
FROM his eighth-floor apartment overlooking the Manitoba Legislative Building, retired public health doctor Pete Sarsfield watches like a pesky conscience.
Poll
Most Popular
- Reserves to get upgrade
- High & dry
- Degrading third-world conditions one more hurdle for disabled man on reserve
- Dry zone
- Stuck with the flow
- Easy to judge, difficult to escape
- Winter, water-hauling a frigid mix
- Getting tap water a miracle
- Poor sanitation, poor health
- Less water than a refugee camp
- High & dry
- Degrading third-world conditions one more hurdle for disabled man on reserve
- Easy to judge, difficult to escape
- Poor sanitation, poor health
- Reserves to get upgrade
- Dry zone
- Less water than a refugee camp
- Red Sucker Lake water woes boil over
- Getting tap water a miracle
- Winter, water-hauling a frigid mix
Ads by Google

