Nestlé should sell Elora well to local municipality, social action group's poll says
Partnership between company, township unacceptable, Council of Canadians says
Nestlé Waters Canada should sell a well they purchased this summer in Elora, Ont., to the local municipality, a poll by the social action group Council of Canadians has found.
Of the 1,200 Ontarians contacted by phone earlier this month by the polling and market research company Oraclepoll, 68 per cent answered "yes" when asked, "Should the provincial government of Ontario require Nestle to sell the Elora well to the township?"
- Centre Wellington doesn't want province to expropriate Middlebrook well from Nestlé
- Township of Centre Wellington tried to buy Elora well now owned by Nestlé
- Community water needs will be met first, Nestlé says of plan to share Middlebrook well
For the same question, 21 per cent said no and 11 per cent said they did not know. The poll has a margin of error of 2.8 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
The Elora well is a "crisis point at the moment in Ontario as far as bottled water permits are concerned," Mark Calzavara, the Ontario-Quebec regional organizer for the Council of Canadians, told CBC News.
Nestlé bought well in August
Nestlé placed a conditional offer on the Elora property, known as the Middlebrook well, in 2014 after the property had been for sale for about eight years.
- Nestlé Waters Canada plan to tap aquifer worries Elora, Ont., residents
- Nestlé test of Elora well gains limited support from critics
The company was waiting for the Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change to approve a pump test for the well – something Nestlé is still waiting on.
In August, Nestlé announced it had purchased the Middlebrook well after an anonymous second buyer put in a no-conditions offer. Nestlé waived all its conditions to buy the property, then later learned the second buyer was the Township of Centre Wellington.
Township of Centre Wellington Mayor Kelly Linton told CBC News in August the township was not in a financial position to purchase the well previously, but an unexpected donation from the local Jack R. MacDonald Trust made it possible for the township to make a bid. The township didn't disclose how much it received from the trust.
Partnership proposed
Since August, Nestlé and the township have been having discussions, although details of those meetings have not been made public.
On Dec. 12, Nestlé Waters Canada hydrologist Andreanne Simard appeared before the township's council to propose discussing a partnership.
"The minute we found out the township was the anonymous bidder, we immediately started thinking of ways that we could partner," Simard told CBC on Thursday.
But she was unable to provide specifics on what that partnership might look like.
"It will be something specific to Centre Wellington and to ensure that their community water supply needs are met first," Simard said.
We just can't see an acceptable solution coming out of that that involves Nestlé getting water out of that aquifer.- Mark Calzavara with the Council of Canadians
Linton said he could not comment on a partnership until the council had a chance to meet again to discuss it.
Mike Nagy, chairman of Wellington Water Watchers, said the township should avoid any kind of partnership.
No 'acceptable solution' from partnership
In an interview in October, Linton said he did not want the province to expropriate the well from Nestlé.
"I don't think they should be expropriating land from a company that has been following all the rules. If you don't like the rules, you change the rules, you don't force things," Linton said.
But Calzavara said Linton is playing it safe and he doesn't want to antagonize Nestlé.
"All his problems would be solved if the provincial government expropriated the well and give it to them," Calzavara said, but plan B might be to purchase the well "or come to some kind of agreement" with Nestlé.
That "agreement," however, is not a proposed partnership, Calzavara said.
"That water isn't meant to be sold for profit, it's meant to be used for the people of the municipality, so it's not really an acceptable solution," he said.
"There's no point in having that discussion with Nestlé," he added. "We just can't see an acceptable solution coming out of that, that involves Nestlé getting water out of that aquifer."