Alt tag
College of Arts and Science faculty member Dr. Bob Patrick (PhD) and Eugene Lewis of the Onion Lake Health Board work to install a climate station at the Onion Lake Cree Nation on Oct. 25. (Photos: Katherine Finn / NSRBC)

Ensuring safe drinking water on a Sask. First Nation

USask researchers plan to establish an Indigenous climate monitoring network across Saskatchewan—a first in Canada

News

By Chris Putnam

University of Saskatchewan (USask) researchers have partnered with a First Nation in western Saskatchewan on a project to protect the community’s drinking water.

Dr. Bob Patrick (PhD), a faculty member in the College of Arts and Science’s Department of Geography and Planning, is one of the collaborators working with the Onion Lake Cree Nation to develop and implement a drinking water protection plan.

“The plan has identified a number of risks to the source of drinking water—shallow wells along the North Saskatchewan River—along with matching management actions to lessen those risks,” said Patrick, who is principal investigator on the project funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC).

Climate station installation
Dr. Bob Patrick (PhD) and Blossom Branger, assistant manager of NSRBC, work on the Onion Lake Cree Nation climate station.


A working committee was established to oversee the Onion Lake initiative with members drawn from the community, the Onion Lake Health Board and the North Saskatchewan River Basin Council (NSRBC).

One piece of the project involved the installation of a climate monitoring station at the Onion Lake Cree Nation on Oct. 25, 2019. The automated station will record wet and dry periods over time to track weather and climate trends.

“Climate conditions are typically reported in towns and cities often far away from the First Nation. Actual conditions can vary significantly on the First Nation, especially under a changing climate. The goal is to establish an Indigenous climate monitoring network across Saskatchewan—a first in Canada,” said Patrick.

The project partners released a video slideshow documenting the climate station installation.

Other collaborators on the community project include Dr. Krys Chutko (PhD) of the geography and planning department, Dr. Grant Ferguson (PhD) of the USask College of Engineering and Katherine Finn, manager of NSRBC.

Patrick and Chutko previously partnered with the Okanese First Nation to install climate stations on lands belonging to that southern Saskatchewan First Nation.

The Onion Lake water protection plan will be unveiled at an open house event at Onion Lake Cree Nation on Nov. 29. Members of the community will be invited to provide feedback at the event.

The project’s $28,000 in SSHRC funding was provided through an Indigenous Research Capacity and Reconciliation Connection Grant.


Related Articles

Making solar cells more weatherproof

USask chemists discover why humidity causes perovskite cells to fail, along with potential solutions

USask’s Amati quartet studied by instrument experts at international event

The USask Amati quartet — viola, cello and two violins—were crafted in the 1600s by members of the famous Amati family in Cremona, Italy

USask makes strides in international subject rankings

The University of Saskatchewan (USask) has ranked in the top 100 universities in the world in four subject areas: Water Resources, Agricultural Sciences, Earth Sciences, Veterinary Sciences