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The Rural Voice, 2002-01, Page 22Changing expectations of farm management will make farmers liable for damage to streams and aquifers so animals and water may not mix. the future. After his experience, Dave advises other farmers to definitely complete an Environmental Farm Plan. He also advises farmer to keep records of their farming activities. Calling himself something of a record freak, due to his veterinary work, Dave kept records of all his farm activities — when he spread manure on what fields, and so on. When officials with the O'Connor Commission studying the Walkerton tragedy looked into his records, they could see that he'd run his farm in an exemplary fashion. It's the kind of evidence that's important to prove a farmer has taken the necessary steps to protect the environment but that may not be enough in the future, says Vogel. If a farmer's operations can be proven to have fouled a regional aquifer the liability can extend far beyond his farm. That's why the Sierra Club of Canada and the Alert -Sierra Coalition are arguing for comprehensive risk-based regulations to require proper hydrogeological study of sites before large livestock operations are constructed. Then if large livestock operations are built in an environmentally vulnerable area, they would be responsible for damages caused to the aquifer. The Alert -Sierra Coalition wants a risk assessment for a new large-scale intensive livestock operation to take into consideration factors affecting the absorptive capacity of the on-site soils and the watershed as a whole. Factors to be considered might include climatic and soil conditions, manure composition, time and rate of spreading, the geology and hydrogeology of the site, the existing aquifer and surface water quality and the proximity of the site to wellhead recharge areas. While all this sounds scary for smaller farmers Vogel feels if regional aquifer vulnerability mapping is done, it may actually help smaller scale farmers. While many farmers and farm groups have hoped that the province's new nutrient management legislation may clear up the situation of farmers' liability, it appears unlikely to. Forces beyond the government are at work. As Dietrich points out, we live in a society that's increasingly ready to sue and the standards that society and the courts expect are becoming higher with every court case. It may be that the rural world has been changed as much by Walkerton as the rest of society has by September 11. For most people, the reality of those changes is just starting to sink in.0 "You were very supportive and sensitive to our situation. We were lucky to have you." Formosa 18 THE RURAL VOICE INSURANCE Your Mutual Choice If you like the idea of insurance being about service and not about profit, ask your broker about Formosa Insurance. www.formosamutual.com