Your wells might need a whole new rulebook
Morning from the Gateway — here's what's moving in The Pas.
You know, sometimes it feels like the folks down south in Winnipeg forget how things work up here, especially when it comes to living off the land. This week, what really caught my eye was the talk about these new provincial rules for shared wells. The government's proposing changes to water safety legislation that many rural Manitobans, including some Hutterite colonies, are saying is just too much. They worry it’s an overreach that will hit them hard in the wallet, making it a burden to keep their shared water sources compliant.
### What This Means for The Pas
Think about it: around The Pas, whether you're out towards Clearwater Lake, on one of the traplines, or even some of the smaller communities off the Flin Flon Highway, shared wells are just part of life. We're used to figuring things out ourselves, community-style.
* This isn't just about Hutterite colonies; it's about anyone who relies on a shared water system outside of town. * The proposed rules could mean significant costs for testing, maintenance, and compliance that smaller communities or groups might not be able to shoulder easily. * It speaks to a bigger question about how well provincial legislation truly understands and supports the unique infrastructure and community arrangements we have in northern Manitoba.
It’s one thing to want safe water—we all do. But it's another to drop a pile of regulations without fully grasping the local reality of who pays for it and how it gets done in places far from the city lights. For us, water isn't just a utility; it's a lifeline, and we look after it. We don't need outsiders telling us how to do it when they don't even know the river levels.
Phil Flett, MiTL Sports Desk.
You should hear Candace and the crew chew on this during the Morning Wire. Tune in live at mornings.live.