{"id":4134,"date":"1961-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1961-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1961-vol-42-no-7-pollution-of-water\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:43:15","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:43:15","slug":"september-1961-vol-42-no-7-pollution-of-water","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1961-vol-42-no-7-pollution-of-water\/","title":{"rendered":"September 1961 &#8211; Vol. 42, No. 7 &#8211; Pollution of Water"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p>Because water is such an intimate part of our daily lives,                     most of us give little thought to it. But few if any problems                     are more closely woven into the fabric of our modern society                     than the control of water pollution.<\/p>\n<p>Clean water is essential to life. Moreover, it is necessary                     to industry, to agriculture, and to the conservation and use                     of the many natural resources upon which our richer life depends.<\/p>\n<p>Here is a paradox: amid our seemingly increasing ease and                     safety, amid the proliferation of comforts and gadgets to                     make physical life happier, the danger to life itself is increasing                     day by day as the result of pollution of our water supplies.<\/p>\n<p>There is world-wide concern with the menace to human                     life arising from scarcity of water in places where it is                     needed and the pollution of water used by people and by the                     creatures we use as food. Two hundred scientists from thirty-three                     countries met in Paris last year to discuss the problem. As                     to scarcity of water, they found that in some places water                     is being taken from the ground about a thousand times faster                     than it is being replenished by rainfall. As a result, water                     must be used over and over again.<\/p>\n<p>The water passing down the St. Lawrence, drawn into domestic                     water systems and industrial plants, has been used and discarded                     by hundreds of cities. Distances between waste outfalls and                     water intakes are being wedged closer and closer together                     by expanding population and the growth of new industrial and                     residential centres.<\/p>\n<p>There is nothing criminal or morally wrong in this development                     of industries and cities. It is the product of man&#8217;s constant                     effort to adapt his physical environment to his changing economic                     and social needs. What would be wrong would be to continue                     taking water for granted without doing anything effective                     to repair the damage caused to it by our own acts. We have                     to learn to come to terms with the poisons we make. Up to                     now we seem to have bypassed the question: &#8220;How much poison                     can I stand and still live?&#8221; and we have contented ourselves                     with calling upon science to give us some corrective and preventive                     prescriptions.<\/p>\n<h3>Causes of pollution<\/h3>\n<p>Pollution comes chiefly from two sources: human sewage and                     industrial waste. It endangers health, it steals from us our                     sports fishing and our bathing, it robs us of our shellfish                     foods and commercial fish supplies, it reduces property values                     by impairing the appearance and the usefulness of our land,                     it makes our drinking water nauseating and raises offensive                     odors. It damages our bridges, docks, boat hulls and buildings.<\/p>\n<p>It is a shocking thought that few people in industrialized                     areas have ever seen streams of any size that were completely                     free of man-made pollution.<\/p>\n<p>We have, in the past, relied trustingly upon nature to protect                     us, but to burden a stream or other body of water with gross                     polluting material and expect safe and attractive water to                     be immediately returned is demanding of nature that it do                     more than its share.<\/p>\n<p>Before our population-industrial surge pollution was                     not a serious problem, because the wastes from every city                     were diluted by the flowing water, oxidized by the bacteria,                     used as fertilizer by the water plants, and filtered through                     the river sands and gravel, so as to reach the next user in                     fairly clean condition.<\/p>\n<p>Multiplication of cities and their discharges has loaded                     the water with an insupportable amount of poisons from the                     factories, offal from the slaughterhouses, raw sewage from                     the homes. These kill the cleansing plants, use up the purifying                     oxygen in the water, and clog the filtering gravels with filth.<\/p>\n<p>We have been accepting all that supinely, and expecting                     our municipal filtration plants to transform the dark coloured                     fluid, sometimes half sewage, into water for drinking. It                     is a grievous reflection on the intelligence of those who                     permit the condition to endure.<\/p>\n<h3>What is pollution?<\/h3>\n<p>It should be made clear that we ourselves are responsible                     for pollution of our water supplies. Pollution is the discharge                     of material that unreasonably impairs the quality of water                     for maximum beneficial use in the overall public interest.<\/p>\n<p>Of what does this material consist? It is made up of body                     wastes, used bath and dish water, washings from restaurants                     and laundries, refuse from hotels and hospitals, and wastes                     from other establishments serving our needs. That is our personal                     contribution. In addition, there are industrial wastes, like                     acids, chemicals, greases, oils, animal and vegetable matter.<\/p>\n<p>For centuries, if water did not offend the senses it was                     considered usable for any purpose. People avoided bitter or                     smelly or coloured water. Today, we know from the discoveries                     of Leeuwenhoek, Pasteur, Koch and Lister the dangers that                     may lurk in clear, odorless water. The bacterial yardstick                     as a measure of pollution has been expanded to include the                     viruses. Now we need a formula to measure the harmful effects                     of numerous chemical substances which may resist treatment                     by conventional or known methods. Any evaluation of present                     day chemical pollution must take account of wastes from new                     organic chemicals such as detergents, insecticides and weed                     killers, as well as of radioactivity.<\/p>\n<h3>Industrial waste<\/h3>\n<p>Today&#8217;s progressive factory owner has just about as much                     at stake in the matter of clean water as has any tap-water                     user. Many a community has lost industrial opportunities because                     the water available was not suited to factory needs. Too many                     communities insist upon industry achieving low levels of contaminants                     in used water, while the municipalities themselves pollute                     the streams with untreated or inadequately treated municipal                     sewage.<\/p>\n<p>In the past twenty-five years industry has for the                     most part assumed its responsibility in the conservation of                     water faster than have municipalities. It spends many millions                     of dollars on waste disposal and in research to improve its                     methods.<\/p>\n<p>More and more, the cost of waste control facilities automatically                     becomes a part of plant installation cost and the operation                     is an integral part of the operating costs of the plant. The                     chemical business in the United States is spending forty million                     dollars a year to control its wastes; pulp and paper manufacturers                     have invested nearly a hundred million dollars in treatment                     systems in the past decade, cutting their pollution per ton                     of paper to half of what it was. At a Quebec plant there has                     been installed a bark burning machine, destroying 150,000                     pounds of a pollutant which would otherwise have floated down                     the river in a day.<\/p>\n<p>Research people are at work constantly in the search for                     improvements. New control methods must be developed progressively                     if they are to keep pace with our changing economy.<\/p>\n<h3>Pesticides<\/h3>\n<p>Insects are man&#8217;s greatest competitor for the food he eats.                     Our survival demands that we control them effectively.<\/p>\n<p>However, this does not demand that we spray-kill everything                     that crawls, flies, bites or bores. In too many cases we have                     also killed birds, animals, fish and bees, and we have poisoned                     the streams from which we drink, and the fruit and vegetables                     we eat.<\/p>\n<p>Pesticides, wisely applied, have done much to improve agriculture                     and give us better health, but their use involves a calculated                     risk and demands widespread education. Farmers have a definite                     responsibility for safe use of chemicals, and those who instruct                     them in the use of chemicals have even greater responsibility.<\/p>\n<p>Unknown ten years ago, there are now on the market well                     over 12,500 brand name products and more than two hundred                     basic control compounds. These, while fulfilling their function                     on land, may enter our water supply by direct application                     to the water surface, by drifting on to the water surface                     from treated fields, or by seepage from the watershed. This                     offers death to fish, to birds, to aquatic animals, and, it                     may be, danger to man. As a speaker said at the National Conference                     on Water Pollution in Washington in December 1960: &#8220;We are                     running an unnecessary risk when we just blithely go ahead                     and use these things because we have not died yet.&#8221; The report                     of this conference is available from the Superintendent of                     Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.,                     for $2.25.<\/p>\n<p>We need pest control, but it is imperative that it be guided                     by responsible and objective leadership and that other interests                     be appropriately co-ordinated with the objectives of                     control.<\/p>\n<p>As a start, public education and education on the county                     agricultural representative level should demonstrate to users                     of sprays and insecticides of all sorts that the material                     is extremely toxic to fish life and must be excluded from                     our waters. A strong declaration on the national level and                     by provincial governments would have a beneficial effect in                     the public interest.<\/p>\n<p>There is proof aplenty of the need. Several years ago severe                     mortality occurred among coho fry, trout and steelhead yearlings                     when a western province forest was sprayed to control the                     blackheaded budworm. Ninety-one per cent of young salmon                     were killed in an eastern province when a forest was sprayed                     against spruce budworm, and aquatic insects wiped out at that                     time had not re-established themselves even sixteen months                     later.<\/p>\n<p>Coming closer to everyday life, we find that synthetic chemical                     contaminants, impossible at this time to remove by sewage                     treatment or by normal water purification practices, are taking                     their toll of aquatic life. A Massachusetts Institute of Technology                     professor told a pollution conference that the chemical industry                     should be asked to create household detergents that can be                     destroyed in city waste treatment plants. As it is, some new                     chemicals have been traced downstream as far as 1,000 miles.<\/p>\n<p>Research on detergents, using rats as subjects, has shown                     that these creatures do not suffer any health hazard from                     detergent residues. However, scientists add: &#8220;&#8230; we do not                     know the long-range effects of these contaminants. We                     may not know some of these effects for generations.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Disease-carrying water<\/h3>\n<p>Dr. Gustave Pr\u00e9vost, head of the biological bureau                     of the Quebec Fish and Game Department, said in February:                     &#8220;People have become so used to living with polluted water                     that they have become indifferent to the problem and accept                     it as a necessary evil.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Everybody relies upon the undoubted fact that science has                     conquered the great water-borne diseases, but the reality                     remains that the source of the diseases -pollution &#8211; has not                     been stopped.<\/p>\n<p>The protective wall built by science keeps epidemics from                     ravaging our cities, but in small ways pollution is slipping                     through the wall. Vague intestinal symptoms put us to bed                     for a few days, and we learn on getting back to the office                     or factory that others, too, have been laid up.<\/p>\n<p>It is no wonder such things happen. How can the grey and                     greasy and scummy water we see along the shore, or the filthy                     conglomerate we find on the bottom of the stream, be turned                     without fail into sparkling and pure tap water to fill our                     drinking glass?<\/p>\n<p>It is time we started to take stern preventive measures.                     Consider the fact that it was sixty years after scientists                     had discovered the link between cholera and sewage-polluted                     drinking water before methods for the purification of water                     began to bring typhoid, endemic diarrhea, and dysentry under                     control. It will take us a long time to restore our streams                     by cleaning the water we return to them.<\/p>\n<h3>Wildlife and recreation<\/h3>\n<p>Turning to non-human sufferers, we find that pollution                     vitally affects birds and fish and other wildlife. It threatens                     the existence of aquatic vegetation, the small aquatic insects,                     the mollusks and the crustaceans on which our waterfowl, game                     fish and water-loving mammals depend.<\/p>\n<p>There have been heavy losses of waterfowl to pollution on                     the Great Lakes and in their connecting waters. On one occasion                     some ten thousand ducks, mostly the scarce canvasbacks and                     redheads, were destroyed on the Detroit River by the release                     of untreated sewage.<\/p>\n<p>In the United States, the area of fish and wildlife habitat                     rendered unproductive every year by pollution is greater than                     that created by all public agencies conducting fish and wildlife                     restoration programmes.<\/p>\n<p>Interest in the relationship of fish population to water                     pollution is not by any means restricted to academic research.                     The supreme interest in the subject is expressed by the angler                     who discovers a stream full of dead fish, and by the commercial                     fisherman who finds his fishing area barren.<\/p>\n<p>These people &#8211; those who respect and value fish and fishing                     for food or recreation &#8211; are increasingly demanding that authorities                     give effect to at least the minimum guarantees. All the replenishment                     of fishing grounds by hatchery stock will be futile if the                     environment of the fish is not right.<\/p>\n<p>There are three types of waste affecting fish: organic wastes                     causing oxygen depletion; wastes that are directly toxic;                     and non-organic wastes which cause some mechanical change                     either to the fish directly or to their habitat. For example,                     sawdust has all three types: it demands much oxygen, it exudes                     toxic substances, and it can directly injure gill filaments                     through mechanical abrasion. In addition, sawdust settles                     to the bottom of the stream and is capable of burying spawning                     gravels and bottom organisms. Soil erosion also contributes                     to sediment pollution, damaging the stream habitat for all                     the more desirable fish. Thousands of miles of otherwise fine                     fishing waters have been taken out of production because of                     the acid damage from coal mines or the poisonous effluent                     from industrial plants.<\/p>\n<p>Oil pollution has its place in the roster of practices damaging                     fish. Sooner or later ships, particularly those using our                     inland waterways, must be so designed that the wastes can                     be pumped ashore for treatment or treated on board.<\/p>\n<h3>Sewage disposal<\/h3>\n<p>The state of affairs involving pollution of our rivers by                     sewage got out of control before the magnitude of the problem                     was realized, and we have not been aggressive enough with                     our treatment programmes to catch up, let alone get ahead                     of the grim condition.<\/p>\n<p>The methods of sewage treatment have now been developed                     to a high degree of efficiency. Primary treatment removes                     some thirty-five per cent of the pollutants by screening                     and sedimentation. Secondary treatment removes, by such means                     as trickling filters or the activated sludge process, the                     wastes that are in solution or in colloidal suspension. As                     a result of primary and secondary treatments, around ninety                     per cent of the organic matter originally present can be removed                     before the effluent is discharged.<\/p>\n<p>Why is this treatment not universal in Canada? It is safe                     to say that there are two reasons: the need has not been appreciated,                     and the cost is not relished. The first excuse can be eliminated                     by education: the second is not so serious when the facts                     are obtained. The cost, spread out over thirty to fifty years,                     said Dr. Pr\u00e9vost, would be less than a cent a day per                     person. There are, he said, 350 such plants in Ontario. While                     there were about forty sewage treatment plants in Quebec,                     only about three or four of them treated sewage completely                     before flushing it into rivers and streams.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever the cost, authorities across Canada are showing                     signs of shrugging off the inertia that has held back action.<\/p>\n<p>The Prime Minister declared in November 1960 that pollution                     of Canada&#8217;s rivers and streams is &#8220;one of the most potentially                     dangerous threats to our whole economy.&#8221; In March it was announced                     that the federal government has voted $100 million to help,                     and is prepared to lend up to 66 per cent of the construction                     costs and to make a gift of 25 per cent of this amount to                     any municipality that finishes its work before March 31, 1963.<\/p>\n<p>A 16-man national committee of prominent engineers                     and scientists is at work studying the use, conservation and                     pollution control of Canada&#8217;s water resources, with a final                     report due at the end of this year. This committee was set                     up by the Engineering Institute of Canada and the Canadian                     Institute on Sewage and Sanitation.<\/p>\n<p>Ontario is putting its shoulder to the job of eliminating                     pollution of its streams at a cost the Premier says will be                     six times that of the St. Lawrence Seaway.<\/p>\n<p>In Quebec, briefs were presented to the government in March                     telling the seriousness of the situation in this province                     and emphasizing the urgency of remedying it. In May, the government                     decided on appointment of a permanent water purification board                     having extensive investigating and regulatory power, and offered                     financial aid to municipalities in the form of a one-sixth                     subsidy. In June, Dr. Gustave Pr\u00e9vost was appointed                     chairman.<\/p>\n<h3>Responsibility<\/h3>\n<p>Where does the responsibility ultimately lie? The answer                     is plain and simple: every city and town, every industry,                     is responsible for cleaning up the pollution it creates. Stream                     sanitation is a co-operative responsibility, involving                     everyone along the banks.<\/p>\n<p>Cities and towns and industries need to call upon the professional                     and technical people who have knowledge of these matters.                     In turn, the people who plan the remedy must take into consideration                     all the users of water.<\/p>\n<p>Pure tap water and clean water for industrial processes                     are essential: so is the wildlife of our streams and lakes.                     Society suffers if one segment of our resource base is managed                     alone without consideration of all others.<\/p>\n<p>After competent engineers collect the data and make recommendations,                     then the force of public opinion enters. The lag between the                     decision to do something effective and the start of work on                     the projects must not be long.<\/p>\n<p>The anti-pollution movement offers an outstanding opportunity                     for country-wide co-ordination, dynamic leadership                     and effective action.<\/p>\n<p>Pollution control fits into the purposes of nearly all civic                     organizations, business, conservation, service and industrial.                     They can all assist, and not only by passing resolutions.                     They can use their own interest, whether boating or swimming,                     hunting or fishing, irrigating or draining, or just enjoying                     nature, to press for action.<\/p>\n<h3>Positive pollution control<\/h3>\n<p>Pollution control in the past has been mostly corrective;                     in the future it must be preventive. Gross pollution is an                     offence to human decency, and it can be corrected only by                     positive methods and controls.<\/p>\n<p>Science and technology have provided the tools, and are                     capable of providing better tools as we need them. All we                     have to do is get at the job in dead earnest.<\/p>\n<p>We should do so in a spirit of maturity of judgment, and                     not in panic actions which will provide half-measure                     solutions.<\/p>\n<p>Then, within our lifetime, we may see our ruined streams                     so rehabilitated that they no longer offend the nose and eye;                     we may enjoy our beaches; we may see birds and fish and small                     creatures return for our enjoyment &#8211; all this, if we sincerely                     desire to meet water quality demands.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[41],"class_list":["post-4134","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-41"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>September 1961 - Vol. 42, No. 7 - Pollution of Water - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1961-vol-42-no-7-pollution-of-water\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"September 1961 - Vol. 42, No. 7 - Pollution of Water - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Because water is such an intimate part of our daily lives, most of us give little thought to it. 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But few if any problems are more closely woven into the fabric of our modern society than the control of water pollution. Clean water is essential to life. 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