Photo courtesy of Water Watch Mission-Abbotsford

Mission and Abbotsford’s Public-Private Water War

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The proposal to privatize the water services in my community seemed to hit us from behind – it was negotiated for over a year in secret and sprung on us without warning. This $300 million project, that would inevitably give control of our water to a foreign consortium, was not something Abbotsford or Mission residents asked for, but part of an agenda being pushed by the federal government and certain corporate individuals on Council. 

To understand my experience and learn how to respond I turned to water documentaries such as FLOW (For Love Of Water) – a documentary about the privatization of drinking water – and saw that this is the typical modus operandi of P3 (public-private partnership) proponents. The film addresses the problems that have occurred in Europe with regard to water systems that are privately operated. However, most of the film is about P3s in the developing world in Africa and South America. I was surprised to find myself relating to the experiences of water consumers in those countries or villages. Even though I consider myself to be a strong, assertive woman, I wept at the similarity of what had happened to them and to what was now happening to my community of Abbotsford, B.C., Canada. I was amazed at the parallels between the fifth largest city in B.C. and communities in the developing world.

A number of concerned citizens of both Abbotsford and Mission have begun exhaustive research on the impacts of public-private water systems on consumers and communities. Water, is after all THE essential to all life.  What became evident at the outset was that a very small percentage of water systems in Canada are the design, build, finance, operate model that the elected representatives of Abbotsford and Mission and their consultant Deloitte & Touche had opted to pursue. In B.C. and Canada the vast majority of local governments opt to have water systems operated publicly. Usually the private sector is limited to the design/build activities of water systems.

The need for more water was not a fact that Council members in both Abbotsford and Mission were unaware of. Two very extensive consultant reports were released in 2006 and 2009 that made it very clear that in order to approve more residential, commercial and industrial development much more water was needed. The estimated cost of the 2006 Water Master Plan was just under $197 million and in 2010 it was $198 million. Both Water Master Plans used costs related to Stave Lake as the source for additional water. A 2009 report prepared by Polis which recommended conservation as a way to have a sustainable water system and save up to 70% was released by the Abbotsford-Mission Water and Sewer Commission. See that report here.

Just months after the 2010 Water Master Plan was released the cost has gone up to $300 million, according to a Deloitte & Touche “business case” commissioned by the city. In addition, the cost to operate the public-private water system Stave Lake section would be $1+ million more per year over the proposed 25 year contract. Apparently, significant cost increases are quite common when P3 design/build and finance/operate “business cases” are submitted to senior governments for funding assistance. Historically, the assistance has been as much as 60% of the capital costs. The public-private “business case” for the Abbotsford/Mission water upgrade was submitted to PPP Canada Inc. – a relatively new crown corporation created by the Harper Conservative government in 2007. According to information available from the Government of Canada, PPP Canada Inc. will “grow” the P3 market in Canada; manage a $2 billion+ P3 Fund, providing up to 25% of municipal and provincial P3 costs; review and assess proposals for P3s seeking federal contributions using a new “P3 screen”; provide advice and expertise for P3 matters; and target municipal and small projects in particular.

Local governments have proclaimed that they have no choice but to opt for a public–private water system if they want to access federal funding (now lowered to 25%). With the P3 cat out of the bag a group of concerned water consumers from both Mission and Abbotsford met and formed Water Watch Mission-Abbotsford. News of this was met with a full page ad in the local media in Abbotsford and Mission, quoting Abbotsford Mayor George Peary erroneously accusing CUPE (the union that represents civic workers) of misleading the public about the impact of P3s. Then Deloitte & Touche was contracted and directed to not even consider anything other than the design/build and finance/operate option. Their recommendation  was finally debated in public on Apr. 4, 2011. Abbotsford Council and staff refused to answer any questions. They looked like deer in the headlights according to one observer. 

A large contingent of the public expressed such strong opposition to the P3 option that Council voted to delay the vote and (finally) address the numerous concerns voiced at the meeting. On the same evening with both Council and staff available to respond to concerns from the public, Mission Council decided to respect the concerns of its citizens and take the bull by the horns and voted the P3 water scheme down. This caused yet another very disrespectful public comment from Mayor Peary who humiliated residents by stating that the tail (Mission) would not be allowed to wag the dog (Abbotsford). Most of the water Abbotsford currently taps – from Norrish Creek – is not in Abbotsford but in Mission, as is Stave Lake.

Many hoped that would be the end of the P3 as both Abbotsford’s Water and Sewer Commission Report on the matter and the “business case” required both Councils to agree to the P3 water scheme. But as far as Mayor Peary was concerned it was still “full steam ahead”. When Abbotsford Council voted on April 18, 2011 on a quickly revised Deloitte & Touche “business case” – which “reduced” the cost to $284 million – to proceed with the P3 water scheme, one Councillor even expressed disgust at being bribed with our own money while we endanger our “gentleman’s agreement” with Mission, our longstanding working partner. However, during the recent federal election campaign Abbotsford Conservative incumbent candidate Ed Fast said that the P3 water scheme is not compulsory in order to obtain federal funds.

The voters of Abbotsford will now be asked to approve the P3 water project in a referendum in November 2011, including a long-term 25 year private contract to finance and operate the water system and the borrowing well over $50 million. The City of Abbotsford is launching a massive communications plan to convince the electorate to vote in favour of this privatization of their water services. However, public opposition to the idea is mounting, along with the logistical problem Abbotsford faces in accessing water located in Mission for which they need right-of-way access. In May Mission Council unanimously refused to consider a request by Abbotsford to grant access to Mission’s roads for the P3 project.

Abbotsford’s Mayor Peary is not making any friends by damning his neighbours in the media, chastising Mission Council and residents for their decision to keep their water system in public hands, and threatening to move forward with the project regardless of the will of Mission residents. There really is no room for bullying and egos when planning how to deliver water for life, not profit, to the public.

Lynn Perrin is the Abbotsford Spokesperson for Water Watch Mission-Abbotsford.

To learn more about the battle over Mission and Abbotsford’s water and how you can help:

Web / Facebook / Youtube / Contact: waterwatchma@live.ca

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About Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon - working with many environmental organizations in BC and around the world. He is the co-founder, along with Rafe Mair, of The Common Sense Canadian, and a board member of both the BC Environmental Network and the Haig-Brown Institute.

8 thoughts on “Mission and Abbotsford’s Public-Private Water War

  1. Wikileaks has said, the N.A.U. is on the way. The U.S. has just been waiting for Harper’s majority, to begin the N.A.U. in small increments at first. This has been Harper’s evil agenda all along.

    BC has been stripped of our assets and resources. Have the BC citizens, seen any benefit from BC’s assets and resources, that Campbell thieved and sold? Have our many mines provided any tax breaks for the people? How about our gas fields? How about our rivers Campbell thieved and sold? Has anyone seen the photo’s of the eco damage, done by the run of the rivers? And we do know, because the theft of our rivers, our hydro, goes up 53% higher. Who owns all of our resources?

    Now the race is on to privatize water. With the N.A.U. our water will go to the U.S. and Mexico. We already do supply, some of the states and Mexico with clean drinking water. But, they need more.

    The water business, is just as dirty as the oil business. Greedy and stupid politicians, are polluting BC into a wasteland. Fracking pollutes, clean underground drinking water, for hundreds of miles. Stupid, stupid greed.

  2. This is an extremely important issue. It amounts to a corporate sell out of a critical public resource, all for the benefit of land developers in Silverdale and Abbotsford. We must say no to private sprawl-water.
    Tracy Lyster
    causs.ca

  3. Thanks to Lynn Perrin for a good, clear report on this maddening situation.

    Yesterday’s news carried the Harper Government’s intention of fighting back against Big Media which, praise be, had finally begun to realize that there are at least two sides to every story. “Fight” in Harper-world and/or Campbell/Clark-world seems to mean turning lies into beautiful gems of ready-to-print flattery. Harper is to become virtually royal. Watch out when Wills & Kate arrive.

    So citizens themselves will have a great deal of responsibility for what we allow or disallow, from now on.

    I hope it’s OK that I reprinted Lynn’s Abbotsford-Mission Water War story at my place, explaining that it’s the same process which stripped BC of its railway.

    The Legislature Raids
    http://bctrialofbasi-virk.blogspot.com

  4. Yes John The Council of Canadians are already aware of and involved in this “water war” as it is crucial to keep our water as a human right that belongs to everyone and not commodified for the profit of foreign investment consortiums. Because of these threats to privatize water – THE essential of all life – CETA is of great concern.

  5. Great article, Lynn! What a tragedy it is that we cannot trust our own elected officials to look out for our welfare and public assets., land and water. You have to suspect that those public officials, including the mayor, were bought and paid for with American corporate bucks. We even have the present Premier being carried around in a plane provided by CN –a carryover from the BC Rail giveaway to that American company? Or does CN want even more from us? It seems American corporations want everything that’s ours, including the very water we drink! We have to fight back sometime! Might as well be now.

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