Arsenic levels in water prompt some Virden residents to scramble

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VIRDEN — Some Virden residents are taking precautions after high levels of arsenic were found in the town’s water supply late last year.

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VIRDEN — Some Virden residents are taking precautions after high levels of arsenic were found in the town’s water supply late last year.

One community member ramped up her purchases of bottled water since a precautionary advisory first went out in October.

“It’s been more common to purchase water every time I go to the drugstore — get a 12-pack or two-four pack, whatever’s on sale,” Chris Dunning said.

Darren More holds the cooler fills with drinking water at a friends farm for use at his home in Virden on Wednesday. Virden is under a Water Quality Advisory with levels of arsenic exceeding the acceptable levels for drinking water. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun)

Darren More holds the cooler fills with drinking water at a friends farm for use at his home in Virden on Wednesday. Virden is under a Water Quality Advisory with levels of arsenic exceeding the acceptable levels for drinking water. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun)

Dunning said she has cut down on her water usage, “just for my own health.”

The town’s aquifer was found last month to have roughly 0.25 milligrams of arsenic per litre of water — well above Health Canada’s drinking water safety guideline limit of 0.10.

The advisory, which is still in effect, says people should use bottled water for drinking and making food, while tap water is OK for things like laundry, showering and washing dishes.

The town has been dealing with arsenic in its water sources for years.

Boiling the water won’t reduce the level of arsenic and could even increase the concentration “very slightly,” the advisory said.

The guideline is based on lifetime exposure of 70 years, which “can slightly increase cancer risk” over long periods of time.

Dunning said she’s not concerned that the town is in this situation because “it’s been like this for years and years.”

“What’s another year, other than … our taxes will definitely go up to try and offset the expenses.”

A precautionary advisory was issued in mid-October as the town prepared to move to a new aquifer after consultants found its existing source was “seriously low.” The province said the town moved to the new source in November.

Another resident said he started hauling water from his friend’s farm after the first advisory in October, but he briefly stopped doing so because the town wasn’t posting regular updates, and he figured the advisory had been lifted.

Darren More said he stopped using tap water in October, but slowly went back to it until he saw the December notice.

“I’d been unknowingly drinking the arsenic levels,” the 45-year-old said while out walking his two dogs recently. “I have Lyme disease, and I kind of noticed a little more upset stomach and just feeling weird.”

Now he’s back to hauling water with a giant orange water cooler again, “just to be on the safe side.”

More said the advisory doesn’t overly concern him, though he would like the town to improve communication on the situation, even if it’s just on Facebook.

“In 2026, messaging can be done so much more quickly and easily,” More said.

“In this day and age, you’re not writing the letter to everybody in town once a week and stamping and mailing and hoping they get it. You can send out a Facebook message saying that there’s no change from last week.”

Chris Dunning said she has cut down on her water usage. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun)

Chris Dunning said she has cut down on her water usage. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun)

In a phone interview Wednesday, Mayor Tina Williams said the town is still looking for another water source and is making changes to its plant to deal with the high levels of arsenic.

The changes include how the water runs through the plant, to bring it more in line with how the previous system operated.

Williams said there hasn’t been much change since the town’s Dec. 19 advisory.

While the advisory suggests people use different sources of water for food and drinking, she said the current wells “don’t have high arsenic.”

“They have slightly above the Canadian levels at the moment, but, I mean, there’s nothing high about it,” Williams said.

The levels of arsenic go up and down regularly because the chemical element is naturally occurring, she said.

She said the town will continue to use those wells “for at least some time” while it waits to hear back from a hydrologist before it can proceed to the next stage.

Finding a new source comes with challenges, because the town uses a lot of water, Williams said.

She added that the town is in regular contact with the province and the water services board.

A provincial spokesperson said the Office of Drinking Water and the department of Environment and Climate Change are responsible for public water systems, issuing advisories and monitoring quality.

ECC and Manitoba Health “remain closely engaged with the Town of Virden,” the spokesperson wrote in an email.

— Brandon Sun

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