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The Rural Voice, 2003-09, Page 8"Our experience assures lower cost water wells" 103 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Associations • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontario Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-664-1424 WATERLOO SCHMIDT'S FARM DRAINAGE 1990 LTD. WWI mow *NIBIOS ....�"..� r -_ • FARM DRAINAGE • EROSION CONTROL • BACKHOEING & EXCAVATIONS • GPS MAPPING Frank Fischer, Harriston 519-338-3484 "We install drainage tubing." 4 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston Another attitude adjustment Keith Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice. He lives near Blyth, ON. Birth -to -packing -plant identifi- cation of beef cattle was a hard sell with some beef producers before a single case of BSE made the need for accurate and speedy tracing of cattle take on new importance. We pretty much took clean water, especially from deep wells, for granted, before seven people died from tainted water in Walkerton. Suddenly water testing and protection became top of mind. And now, following the Great Blackout that left 50 million North Americans in the dark, energy conservation may become not just something that people talk about, but essential if we want to keep the lights on and our businesses going. In all cases, nothing has really changed and yet everything has changed. Tracing of animals was important before — now we just realize why. People aren't at any more danger from bacteria in their water now than before Walkerton, but now we understand the potential harm of making a mistake. And we already needed to conserve electricity, now we know the consequences if our system fails. In a way we humans are like the advice given by a mule -handler: "First you hit it over the head with a two-by-four to get its attention." Well they've got our attention now! What major events like Walkerton or the big blackout do is reshuffle our priorities. On any subject, there is a whole range of benefits or detractions and our decision-making depends on the priority we give these. For the Ontario government prior to the Walkerton tragedy, the priority was cutting government payroll. The safety of drinking water was barely on the radar screen because we took it as a given. Those people who were to look over the shoulders of local water managers were just seen as duplicating work and therefore could be safely laid off in the interest of cutting bureaucracy and taxes. Suddenly in one tragic instant, those priorities were scrambled and safe water topped savings, to the point the government has enacted regulations to protect water that are driving small municipalities crazy. Or take the situation after the blackout. Public health officials were shaking their heads because people were getting sick from eating food left in refrigerators and freezers instead of throwing it out, as they advised. For well-paid civil servants the priority was food safety. But for people who could hardly afford the groceries the the first place, saving money was a higher priority. For others, the idea of wasting food that might still be good was the concern. This waste versus safety issue also depends on your point of view on issues. Today hospitals create an incredible amount of waste with gloves and needles and all other kinds of medical supplies that are used once, then thrown out. Medical officials see it as a health and safety issue but if your concern is waste, whether buried or incinerated, the issue takes on a whole different hue. In farming, focus recently has been on a certain kind of efficiency. Low cost, reliable electricity has led to large facilities that use electricity for ventilation, electricity for feeding and watering, electricity for record keeping. Under the current rules it all makes economic sense. If things change, if the price of electricity soars to buy new supply and revital- ize the power grid or security becomes a concern, priorities might be reshuffled. On the other hand, higher electrical prices could make farm - generated electricity from methane digesters, biodiesel or wind energy suddenly become more viable. Our thinking will change because of the new reality imposed by the blackout. Those who can guess how it will change have the greatest opportunity for success.0