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Home / The Country

Otago lead contamination: Dunedin council offers free fruit and veg to affected residents

RNZ
7 Feb, 2021 03:38 AM3 mins to read

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Containers for water near a tanker in Waikouaiti. Photo / Tess Brunton, RNZ

Containers for water near a tanker in Waikouaiti. Photo / Tess Brunton, RNZ

By RNZ

Free fruit and vegetables will be on offer for Otago residents whose water supply is contaminated with lead.

The Dunedin City Council said it would supply a range of produce to people in Waikouaiti, Karitane and Hawksbury, until the potential effects of eating home-grown vegetables irrigated with the water were clear.

Council chief executive Sandy Graham said: "This is a very worrying time for residents in these communities and it's important we do what we can to help at a practical level while we continue working towards finding the cause of the contamination".

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Free produce would be available from Tuesday until Friday at the East Otago Events Centre, when it was open for blood testing.

The no-drink water notice for Waikouaiti and Karitane remained in place and water tankers were providing safe drinking water.

The next set of water test results would be available on Tuesday, Graham said.

The council detected elevated lead levels in Waikouaiti's water supply last August.

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But the public were not told until Tuesday. The council said a test sample taken on December 8 showed a lead level four times the permitted level.

Two days later it emerged that the level in the water was almost 40 times the acceptable level.

More than 500 residents expressed their frustrations to officials from the city council and Southern DHB at a heated meeting on Friday night.

Waikouaiti Coast Community Board chairman Alasdair Morrison said some of the hostility started to subside when questions were addressed.

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Today the council said that from Tuesday it would provide staff to offer assistance and answer questions while the tankers were dispensing water.

It was also planning to set up a drop-in centre at the Waikouaiti Library from February 15 so residents could speak to staff about their concerns.

The source of the contamination was still not known, but lead joins in older pipes, environmental contamination in the wider catchment, or even sampling errors, were all potential causes of the spikes, the council said.

Work to dig up and check the condition of some sections of old cast iron water pipes in Waikouaiti had almost finished. Five sections of pipeline across the area, including a section in Edinburgh St, were being assessed.

The council planned to replace sections that had lead joins to remove the potential source of contamination from the network.

- RNZ

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