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The Rural Voice, 2002-08, Page 8WEST WAWANOSH MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY 1879 (4) 2002 '71(eighhour helping .N ghhour" 529-7921 PTO SAFETY ►DANGER .0411( 111 DommriArlsza, 1. Always disengage the PTO, shut off the engine and remove the keys before leaving the tractor seat. 2. Keep the tractors master shield in place at all times. 3. Check frequently to confirm that integral shields are in good condition. 4. Never step across a rotating powershaft. 5. Dress for safety. Wear close fitting clothes and keep long hair covered. YOUR LOCAL AGENTS Frank Foran, Lucknow Donald Simpson, Ripley Omni Insurance, Clinton Omni Insurance, Goderich Omni Insurance, Auburn Lyons & Mulhern Insurance, Goderich McMaster Siemon Insurance, Mitchell Noble Insurance, Meaford Miller Insurance, Kincardine P.A. Roy Insurance, Clinton P.A. Roy Insurance, Wingham Banter, MacEwan, Feagan, Goderich 524-8376 Noble Insurance, Owen Sound 1-800-950-4758 John Moore Insurance, Dublin 345-2512 Hemsworth Insurance, Listowel 291-3920 Kleinknecht Insurance, Linwood 698-2215 Miller Insurance, Southampton 797-3355 Miller Insurance, Owen Sound 376-0590 Gray Insurance, Seaforth 522-0399 Craig, McDonald, Reddon, Walkerton 881-2701 Craig, McDonald, Reddon, Hanover Craig, McDonald, Reddon, Mildmay Craig, McDonald, Reddon. Durham Chatsworth Insurance, Chatsworth Davis & McLay Insurance, Lions Head Elliott Nixon Insurance, Blyth Seaforth Insurance, Seaforth Sholdice Insurance, Brussels 528-3824 395-5362 482-3434 524-9899 529-7273 524-2664 348-9150 538-1350 396-3465 482-9357 357-2851 364-3540 367-2297 369-2935 794-2870 793-3322 523-4481 527-1610 887-6100 "INSURANCE FOR FARM, RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL ANO AUTO" • A Member Of The 1„ Ontano Mutual Insurance Association 4 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston The danger of contrariness Keith Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice. He lives near Bluth. ON. I recently got around to reading Well of Lies, Colin Perkel's book on the Walkerton water crisis. It reads like a thriller but there's something chilling in what it says about our rural culture. The reassuring thing is that it took an incredible chain of things going wrong for the tragedy to occur that saw 2,300 Walkerton and area residents get sick and seven people die because of E. coli -poisoned water. In fact Perkel could have called his book Worst Case Scenario. If it hadn't been for a 40 -year rain storm, the incompetence and ignorance of Stan and Frank Koebel which went unseen by overseeing councillors and public utilities commissioners and undisciplined by Ministry of Environment inspectors, would not have hurt anyone. But what's unnerving is that the same seeds that led to Walkerton's tragedy are present in nearly every rural community. When I spoke recently with a former councillor and a former PUC commissioner from a nearby munici-pality, they agreed the only difference with the Koebels was they got caught. Writer and humourist Dan Needles once told me the thing he liked about living in the country was that country people were contrarians. We don't easily buy into the latest fashion, a tradition that is refreshing, but our contrary nature also leads us to a distrust of "experts". Engineers, rural councillors would say only half - jokingly, are those guys who try to make water run up hill. And so it's easy to identify with Stan and Frank Koebel. They knew Walkerton's water came from deep wells and it had to be pure despite warnings from the "experts". Therefore all this stuff about chlorinating the water was just bureaucratic nonsense — so stick in some numbers that will keep the paper-shufflers happy, even if you have to make them up. The part-time local politicians trusted their full-time staff to do their jobs and didn't know they were fud- ging the figures. Still, I'll bet some of those elected officials wouldn't have worried about the safety of Walker- ton residents anyway because they too believed the chlorination and paperwork were useless red tape. Their constituents, meanwhile, were more likely to complain about too much chlorine in the water than not enough. But what about the Ministry of Environment officials who should have been looking over the shoulders of the Koebels? Certainly with the cutbacks by the provincial govern- ment there weren't as many people to do the job of inspecting the water systems of western Ontario, but it went further. The cutbacks sent signals that the government also agreed that a lot of this red tape was nonsense so why would people at the local MOE office stick their heads in a wringer by forcing people to adhere to rules that nobody believed in? It's not just water, either. For years I heard MOE officials attend local councils to complain about open burning at local landfills. Councillors would promise to do better but the next Saturday there'd be a plume of smoke from the dump. If someone complained there'd be knowing looks when someone mentioned a "light- ning strike". It's hard to convince many country people of the danger of chemicals from burning plastic and household waste: after all once it's up in the air its gone, right? Seven deaths and 2,300 sick people shocked us into understanding the danger that can lurk in our supposedly pure water, but it hasn't really changed our underlying distrust of rules and rule -makers. Read A Wel! of Lies and watch for the attitudes of yourself and your neighbours in it. The least we owe the victims of Walkerton is to learn from our mistakes and change our ways to make sure it doesn't happen again.0