Water on the Table Viewing in Erin on February 15th!

Greetings Water Watchers!  For all those members or interested parties living in Guelph/Eramosa/Erin township areas, you may be interested in catching the film outlined below:  Water On The Table.

This woman wants Water On The Table!

Water, the essence of all life, is the subject of FAST FORWARD 2012’s next eco-film on February 15 in Erin – and everyone in this neck of the woods would surely agree it’s a vital issue. Between heated debates about mandatory water hook-ups in the Town of Erin, concern about Nestlé’s upcoming permit renewal seeking hundreds of millions of litres of Hillsburgh water for bottling in Aberfoyle, and whether or not the ‘Big Pipe’ is coming to Guelph or Georgetown, there’s no shortage of important local H2O issues on our table. Water On The Tablefeatures Canadian ‘water warrior’ Maude Barlow (photo) and her epic campaign to have water declared an international human right by the United Nations, despite stiff opposition from the Canadian government and other critics. Will she succeed? Join us to find out!Doors open at 6:30 pm, film starts at 7:00 pm, Wednesday February 15, at the Erin Legion, 12 Dundas Street East, Erin. Free admission. Organic popcorn too!

Water On The Table is sponsored by Credit Valley Conservation. The 2012 FAST FORWARD Eco-Film Fest is organized and presented by the Climate Change Action Group of Erin (CCAGE).

• For a sneak preview, here’s the trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Z1JgAAnmmI
• More info: Liz Armstrong, CCAGE 519-833-4676.

 

Do you want to host an event during Canada Water Week?

Just like it sounds, Canada Water Week is a week-long celebration of water from coast-to-coast-to-coast, coinciding with World Water Day on March 22. This year, Canada Water Week runs from March 19 to 25, 2012.  Individuals, organizations and governments from across the country are rallying around the theme of “Discovering our Water Footprint” by organizing or participating in fun and educational events.

Guelph is the city that is making a difference; being a groundwater-based community with a finite resource, conserving, protecting and enjoying our water is everyone’s responsibility. If you are interested in hosting an event (e.x. a water-themed movie night or book club meeting, poetry slam for water), theme a community gathering you’ve already planned (e.x. a “blues night” at the local hot spot), or are interested in learning more about what you can do, I encourage you to take a look at www.canadawaterweek.com to register an event, and explore guelph.ca/waterconservation for a great number of water saving tips.

If you are interested in hosting an event, and I can be of help, please let me know.

Sincerely,

Heather Yates | Water Conservation Program Coordinator
Planning & Building, Engineering and Environment | Water Services
City of Guelph

T 519-822-1260 x 2831  | F  519-822-8837
E
heather.yates@guelph.ca

Shane Philips’ “Walk for Water” Diary

Preface:

During the passed few weeks in my travels through parts of the middle east and europe one thing that has resonated even more in my day to day life is water. In my visit to Dubai, one of the richest cities in the world, a city literally built out of the dessert, one thing was blazingly apparent. Through all the technical and engineering achievements and billions of dollars of disposable money, water was the forgotten traggedy of this glorious city. As I sat in my 7 star hotel room I was reminded that drinking the water that flowed from the taps would result in sickness and that my only choice was the bottled water that was shipped from far away. I was reminded that swimming in the beautiful sea near my hotel was not a great idea as the effluent from  this madggestic city poured into the sea under-treated if not treated at all.

In Germany the problem is the same but different. Although the water is perfectly drinkable people have been sold the idea that most of the western world has bought. The bottle is better! How is it that a bottle of water here is more expensive than a bottle of beer? Shouldn’t be the other way around.

Regardless I believe the problem has been a result of the human condition to always take for granted what is in abundance. Or is it?

April 12th, 2011.

Waking up every morning is a ritual for me. I don’t drag myself out of bed rather I do my best to celebrate the fact that I have a whole other day to do something significant in my life. This morning I woke up with butterflies and told myself “I am doing this.” After eating breakfast and then stretching my mom had woken up and asked me what I was doing. I merely replied “Im going to Toronto and will be back tomorrow.” I decided that I would drive my car to my starting point only 500 meters down the road as not to alarm my mom to what I was actually doing. Walking the distance.

After a photo op with the local paper I started my trek down number six highway. I felt great and was excited. I had a mean cross wind which managed to throw me around fairly often especially while I carried my picket sign which acted like a sail but I had clear skies and the sun shining down on me of which has always been a source of strength for me. As you could imagine, walking alone for the first stretch could have proven lonely but over the past few years I have learned to appreciate solitude and being with myself. I had music and when I got tired of that I always had my thoughts and the sound of the wind and the sights of a picturesque countryside to look at even as transport trucks zoomed by me blowing me five feet too and fro.

When my pace slowed every so often I would hear someone in their car honking in encouragement. I would perk up, a smile would emerge and my stride would return to normal. It’s the power of human connection. To know that someone somewhere appreciates you even if it is a stranger. One person even stopped to offer me a ride. “No one will know” he said. I laughed and replied “I will though.” It then began to settle in that I may be doing this in vein. Even if I made it all the way the MOE may not meet with me. Even if I walk straight through the night media coverage may not care about water issues locally and abroad. I decided the only way I could accomplish my goal was to walk for me. At the least I could say to my self i did it.

Several times in the day Arlene came by either to bring me some warm tea and real food and provide me with fellowship or just to check in on me. At times her concern and care led her to assure me that if I needed to stop at anytime all was well with this decision. However I was feeling strong and motivated and as we finished our short dinner break in the park I set off into the sunset down highway 5. It was a beautiful sunset and as I left Waterdown it followed me as long as it could while descending the escarpment into the cold of night.

Just before midnight i decided to take a break and stretch at a roadside church. It was very important to keep a regiment as my legs were in pain from walking the past 14 hours. It was also very important to keep them warm as the night time temperature had dropped to -1C. As I started up again several minutes had passed when a car drove by me then did a complete u-turn to come back and eventually pull up beside me. The man in the car rolled down his window and said “I saw you twelve hours ago when I started my day near Guelph…… what are you doing?”  I told him about my walk for water and as luck would have it he would be the kind of person to have his very own mason jar of tap water. He offered me his water and some nuts and I accepted with gratitude. As he left his last words were “You are going to do it.”

April 13th, 2011

At around 1 a.m. I was in the Burlington area and Mark from Wellington Water Watchers took the time to drive up from Guelph and meet me at a gas station to give me tea and food. It was a welcome alternative to convenient store food which was the only thing available at that time. As we sat in his car I took the opportunity to warm my body. Though I was dressed well, the cold was still settling into my bones. As we talked he asked how I was doing. He also assured me that if I needed to sleep and return in the morning, it was OK!!. I thought hard about it and a few moments later thanked him for being such a good support and hit the pavement.

At about 2 a.m. I started my stretch break in a graveyard that was at the side of the road in the middle of the countryside. It was one of those small sites that had been there for at least 150 years. It was actually very peaceful lying on my back starring at the stars. I tried to admire how beautiful the universe was. It was a better thought than starting back on my trek. I knew I could not stand still too long though or I would start to freeze so common sense got me back on my feet and back to work. Soon after a police cruiser stopped me to ask what I was doing. I told him about my walk for water. He assumed I started from Waterdown and asked if I lived there. I replied no, “I live in Guelph and thats where my journey began.” At this point he was sort of taken aback and then asked me if I knew how many more kilometers I had left to go as if he knew something dreadful that I was not aware of. I answered “I think about 50-60 more km”. His face said it all. I think he realized at that point that I was not crazy. “You’re about right” he then said, thanked me for what I was doing and wished me well. Eventually clear skies turned to snow. Not one light shined in this dark countryside and with no stars to look at I felt very alone.

Along the way I had people text me. Some I knew and some strangers. All with encouragement but at this point I had not heard from anyone since about midnight. I got a call at about 3 a.m.! Finally someone to talk too. It was my sister-in law. She had woken up in the night and thought to call me to make sure I was OK. It was her 6 year old daughter’s letter which I carried. Chandra had taken two days to write this letter and I told her I would deliver it to the MOE. Chandra like all others her age will eventually inherit the world we decide to create. It was important she be heard. It was motivation enough to keep me going.

By the time I reached Oakville my stride had been reduced to hopeless steps each one only covering the distance of my feet. I was slumped over and my picket sign barely balancing on my shoulder. As I walked over a bridge I layed down along the slope of the shoulder to shield me from the wind and snow flurries. I felt like I had given up! My eyes closed as I started to fall asleep. “How nice it would be to stop now” I said to myself. An image then flashed in my mind. It was an image that changed my life years ago of an orphan little girl during the famine in Suddan. Her frail body slumped over from the exhuastion of her walk as a vulture waited for her to die. The photographer had taken the prize winning picture and then left her. He would later go on to commit suicide because of his actions. I made a call at this time to my dear friend Kira and my heart was energized. I arose out of my grave and told myself “just keep walking and the sun will eventually rise on you.”

I walked and I walked and the pain of the past twenty hours radiated throughout my body. I knew my heart was up to the task but I was not sure if my body could follow. With every step I felt my hips grind and anticipated my shins snapping at any moment which led me to finally say a prayer to my dad. In the calm and cold of night I quietly said one thing, “help.” Something amazing then happened. The horizon that was night had started to light up. The air that was burning the skin on my face was now soothing it. I could see the CN tower as I emerged from Credit Valley. With each passing minute the air grew warmer and my stride stronger as I arrived in Mississuaga the hustle and bustle of weekday life was evident. It was about 7 or 8 a.m. and people were on their ways to work driving by me or just waiting at a bus stop. Some of them were oblivious to my passing and some of them watched and wondered, who was this person walking by me with a “Walk For Water” picket sign.

My redgement of stretching every 2-3 hours had been reduced to every 40 minutes or so. My legs had reached its pain thresh hold so I began to talk to my legs as if they were a friend walking with me. A ritual insued completing every stretch period as I shouted to my legs “Walk, keep walking!” while bending my knees and striking my flexed thighs with my two fists as if two will them further.

The clear morning eventually turned grey and as I reached Etobicoke rain started to fall on me. I was exhuasted, I was in so much pain, I was cold and wet and with every bend I looked for Highway 427, the landmark I knew to be Toronto. With every turn my hope was diminishing. What I failed to realize was just because I couldn’t see it didnt mean it wasnt in sight. Out of the corner of my eye I saw the three buildings side by side I knew to be on the 427. Ahead of me I saw a tiny sign the grew bigger with every step. “Welcome To Toronto”. I stopped put my hand on the sign and in a burst of emotion I started to cry because I had did it and my heart was bursting with emotion.

Arlene would soon track me down and welcome me as I entered Toronto. We eventually settled in Bloor West Village to grab a hot breakfast for me and some coffee but alas the break was short. I had a meeting to get two and I was running short on time. Arlene had scheduled it for 2 p.m. and I had to pick up my pace to actually make it. My legs were on fire but so was my heart. Strangers stopped to ask me what I was doing and although I wanted to make the meeting I realized the importance in connecting with people throughout my journey especially the individuals who were resonating with what I was doing but did not know it yet.  I now walked for all of us and as I got to about 2 k.m. away I began to really pick up the pace. I had only 30 minutes to make my meeting with the Minister. On any other day 2 k.m. seemed easy for me to do as I usually ran 5 k.m. in the same time that was remaining however I was not sure if my legs would bare the pressure and pounding of running at this point. I had to try though. My walk turned to a light jog and when I arrived to the Annex I was in full stride with my picket sign held high and only minutes left to my deadline. Most people were not sure what was going on and as I passed them the picture of a tired old homeless man burnt into my mind. Motionless sitting on a bench this withered and worn Santa Clause soon caught wind of what was in the air as he lit up like a light bulb and with a huge smile, rose his fist and yelled “Yah!” as if he had understood the pain and passion of the journey I was about to complete. “Was he an angel?”  was my first thought and then it was evident. They were all angels. Every person who supported me, who called or texted me. Every person who stopped their day to encourage me and give me water or stranger who cared to ask what I was doing. Although I walked alone I could not have done it by myself.

Comedic video created by local water activists Patrick Cieslar and Kira Burger

Check it out on YouTube!!   Comedic YouTube video created by local water activists Patrick Cieslar and Kira Burger

How will you make a difference this summer?

Hop on your bike to spin the wheels of change with us.  Teams of dedicated youth (18-30ish) will be cycling for two months to communities around Canada to perform a thought-provoking play and deliver energizing workshops promoting a more sustainable and just world.   Be one of them.      www.otesha.ca

Tours Offered in 2012
May to June:                            Rising Tide Tour – Fredericton to Halifax
July:                                        9 Day Shift Tour – Ottawa (All ages tour)
September to October:              Phenomenal Food Tour – Kitchener-Waterloo to Ottawa
September to October:              Water Works Tour – Kitchener-Waterloo to Ottawa

Thoughts from the “Walk for Water”

Our sincere thanks to Kira Burger, one of the 6 dedicated souls who walked to Queen’s Park in Toronto from Guelph on a “Walk for Water”….

 

It’s raining. The sky is the colour of the pavement that stretches out before our tired legs. I see Toronto’s CN Tower hovering on the horizon, appearing more a mirage in the mist than a physical reality. It’s 7am on a Sunday morning in Burlington. Mixed in with the hum of cars passing us by, I can hear the laughter of groggy voices, and the patter of five pairs of feet keeping an optimistic pace on their second day of a long journey. We are Walking for Water.

 

What does it mean to walk for water? For some, it means dedicating hours out of every day to walk to a well, river or lake to fetch as much water as can be carried home in buckets. For others, it means walking to a tap in their kitchen or bathroom that will provide a seemingly endless flow at the turn of a handle. For seven individuals in Guelph, it meant walking 102 kilometres to Queen’s Park in Toronto in defence of a simple principle: access to adequate clean, potable water is a basic human right.

 

The concept is simple, but the implications are far reaching. How do we ensure that safe water is available to all, regardless of one’s ability to pay for it? To do this, we need to re imagine how we define water in a world where we have come to understand value through dollars and cents. Do we define water as a commodity and charge the market with the responsibility of distributing this human right? Do we prioritize immediate economic development over long term watershed protection? When our governments fail to bring us water that is as hard, or soft, or crisp, or chlorine free, or – more critically – as safe as we want, do we send them the message that we need something changed, or do we shell out cash for a private option and then send them the message that no one’s drinking the water they provide anyhow?

 

We can imagine a different system. People define what can be bought and sold, and what deserves the utmost protection. If we’ve decided that we cannot buy and sell human life, should we be able to buy and sell the basis of that life? Under what circumstances? We needn’t take for granted that things are just the way they are; what we’ve created, we can also change.

 

Our Walk for Water didn’t solve these challenging questions. We didn’t garner the attention of government or big media. Our walk didn’t have any measurable outcomes. What our Walk for Water did was plant a seed. It brought seven people together in a way that no amount of letter writing or campaign designing could have. It inspired new and creative approaches to action and community engagement. It brought new energy and life to Wellington Water Watchers. The seed planted on our walk has sprouted relationships and ideas that will continue to produce for years to come.

 

A 102 kilometre Walk for Water. Was is crazy? Yes. Was it worth it? Absolutely.

 

 

Speed River Festival discussion

Proposal: Speed River Festival                                                                           

 

Project:

  • Establish the Speed River Festival in Guelph as a means of promoting the awareness, appreciation and restoration of this natural amenity
  • Build on the history of community engagement through events such as the Speed River Project to use a festival to focus interest on the rivers and related environmental issues in Guelph
  • Use the festival as a means of promoting awareness and involvement of non-governmental and governmental organizations and initiatives relevant to the environment in the city
  • Contribute to the economic vitality of the area through the festival approach – Guelph currently has 5 festivals that spark considerable local economic activity

 

Description: 

 

  • Nature festivals are a growing phenomenon used in promoting awareness and appreciation of the environment.  The Speed River festival would expand on the local interest in this natural amenity.
  • The festival could see an expansion from the one day Speed  River Clean Up in early June up to a weeklong series of events each organized by a different community group.
  • The festival would be the first in the city that would be based on a natural amenity as compared to a cultural focus.

 

Some local organizations that might be involved include:

-OPIRG, field naturalists, trial club, Nature in the Neighbourhood,  Arboretum, canoe club, wildflower society, health unit (fitness interest), photography groups, artistic organizations, Trout Unlimited, neighbourhood groups such as Two Rivers, and other the festivals that could sponsor/organize a relavent event, city parks and recreation, schools, and others

 

Potential

  • The  Speed River Festival could evolve into its own initiative and organization with its own  board of directors

 

Support

  • Seed funding is available from the Gosling Foundation
  • Other local sources are available and research into the operation of the other city’s festivals would reveal additional sources of funding and options for sustainability

 

Next Steps

The River Systems Advisory Committee and The Gosling Foundation will host a discussion meeting on Thursday December 1, 7:30 p.m. at Dublin Street United Church, Hallman Room to initiate a discussion about this project, determine the interest and start initial organizing if interest warrants it.

 

Please RSVP   skozak@goslingfoundation.org

 

 

For further information please contact:

 

Stan Kozak   -Project Consultant -Telephone 519 826-0408  skozak@goslingfoundation.org

or Jeremy Shute  -Chair, River Systems Advisory Committee, Telephone 519 993-2706 Jeremy.Shute@aecom.com

 

Movement to stop the mega quarrygarners tourism awards

Media Release                    

 

 

 FOODSTOCK wins big at tourism awards

 

November 17th, 2011

Honeywood, ON – One month after 28,000 people gathered for FOODSTOCK, the event has won two top tourism awards in the Hills of Headwaters. The festival, which celebrated the bounty of farmland at risk of a proposed mega quarry, was honoured at the Taste of Tourism Awards last night. FOODSTOCK was awarded Best Agri-Tourism Experience and Best Culinary Tourism Experience in the Hills of Headwaters for 2011.

 

On that blustery Sunday in October, 100 chefs from Nunavut to Saskatchewan descended on a small farming community north of Shelburne, ON to help put a stop to a proposed mega quarry project that would potentially devastate thousands of acres of high yield, Class 1 farmland.  Using local ingredients, they cooked for the thousands who participated in one of the largest protests in Canadian history.

 

In a year of record nominations for tourism awards, FOODSTOCK walked away with top honours. “FOODSTOCK fits right in with our organization’s values,” affirms Michele Harris, Executive Director for The Hills of Headwaters Tourism Association. “Respect for our natural landscapes, our rural heritage and our sense of community.”

 

Carl Cosack, the Stetson-wearing owner of Peace Valley Ranch and Chairman of NDACT, attended the awards ceremony last night at the Dufferin County Museum. “On behalf of Michael Stadtländer and the Canadian Chefs’ Congress, I’d like to thank the hundreds of volunteers who made FOODSTOCK an epic event,” says Cosack. “It was an outstanding experience for all of us involved.”

 

Stadtländer—a celebrated chef whose nearby Eigensinn Farm and Haisai Restaurant have become internationally-recognized gourmet destinations—headed up the event together with the Canadian Chefs’ Congress, a national organization that kicked into high gear to help preserve valuable farmland.

 

Hundreds of people like Stadtländer and Cosack helped with FOODSTOCK. The Canadian Chefs’ Congress organized, financed and produced the event, aided by local farming families who donated food and volunteers who came from as far away as Toronto to contribute time and resources to make the event possible.

 

The mega quarry proposal was put forward last spring by The Highland Companies, a Canadian corporation created by a Boston hedge fund, the Baupost Group.

The proposed quarry would:

  • Be Canada’s largest open pit quarry at 2,316 acres
  • Require extraction of at least 600 million litres of water per day FOREVER, affecting the watersheds of southern Ontario rivers
  • Impact thousands of acres of Class 1 farmland made up of Honeywood Silt Loam—a specialty soil now producing many kinds of vegetables in addition to approximately 50% of the potatoes consumed in the GTA.

See nomegaquarry.ca or NDACT.com for more details.

 

For specific media inquiries, please contact: Carl Michener, Outwrite Communications 416 476 7484.

###

Walk for Water

On October 1 and 2, 2011, six brave souls headed out on a 102 km walk from Guelph to Queen’s Park, to “Walk for Water”  – drawing attention to our lack of Provincial water protection. Shane Philips, Kira Burger, Christopher Green, Karma Davis, Mary-Anne Patterson and Patrick Cieslar are heroes to me. In a world where we see so many people go to such great lengths for greed and corruption, these six individuals walked an unbelievable 102 km – in 2 short days, not for any personal gain but simply for their dedication and passion to our life giving source – WATER. Below is a photo essay of their walk.

Many thanks to these friends!

 

GRCA News: Watershed residents can participate in survey on water issues

Dave Schultz dschultz@grandriver.ca
show details 10:37 AM (23 minutes ago)

Grand River Conservation Authority

GRCA NEWS

 

Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2011

Release on receipt

Grand River watershed residents
can participate in survey on water issues

The Grand River Conservation Authority is asking residents to participate in a survey on water issues in the Grand River watershed.

The GRCA is conducting the survey as part of a project to update a Water Management Plan that will examine the future needs of the watershed in three critical areas: water supply, water quality and flood damaged reduction. The survey can be found on the GRCA’s website at www.grandriver.ca

The survey will be open until Dec. 2.

The survey asks participants to identify the ways they use water in home, on the farm, in business and industry or in the community as a whole. The survey outlines a series of objectives for water and the river system in a variety of areas – water supply, culture and tourism, biodiversity and others – and asks if those objectives are being met.

The Water Management Plan is an update of the last plan completed in 1982. That earlier plan was developed to address challenges facing the watershed at that time. Nearly all of its recommendations were implemented.

The new, updated plan will look at water issues in light of 21st century challenges including population growth, climate change and intensive agriculture.

The GRCA is working with municipalities, provincial and federal ministries and First Nations to develop the plan. Work has been underway for about a year and the plan is scheduled to be completed by March 2013.

More information on the Water Management Plan and the survey is available on the GRCA website in the Water Management Plan section.

 

Further information:

Dave Schultz, GRCA Manager of Communications

Phone 519-621-2763 x2273  |  Cell 519-658-3896  |  Email dschultz@grandriver.ca   |  Web www.grandriver.ca

 

You can receive GRCA news releases by signing up for our free subscription service.
Instructions on subscribing, or unsubscribing if you are a current recipient,
are here: http://www.grandriver.ca/Newsroom/News.cfm?id=376

Archives