'A sort of destiny': The Multi-Jurisdictional Response to Sewage Pollution in the Great Lakes, 1900-1930
Author(s) -
Jennifer Read
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
scientia canadensis canadian journal of the history of science technology and medicine
Language(s) - French
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1918-7750
pISSN - 0829-2507
DOI - 10.7202/800408ar
Subject(s) - legislation , public health , commission , political science , public administration , government (linguistics) , environmental protection , convention , pollution , environmental planning , environmental health , business , geography , law , medicine , ecology , linguistics , philosophy , nursing , biology
At the turn of the twentieth century, water pollution was the primary vector spreading waterborne disease and a public health issue. In the Great Lakes basin, unprecedentedly high mortality from typhoid fever prompted a conference of federal and provincial public health officials in 1910. Three related initiatives resulted: the provincial government amended the Public Health Act in 1912; federal legislators attempted to develop national pollution control legislation between 1912 and 1915; the International Joint Commission investigated cross boundary pollution in 1912 and recommended a convention to control it. Of the three initiatives, only the provincial Public Health Act amendments were carried to fruition. By 1915, the almost universal adoption of chlorine treatment for municipal water supplies effectively controlled waterborne disease and there was no longer a perceived need for further action.
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