Municipality
The Township of North Huron provides clean, safe drinking water to more than 975 people in Blyth. Your positive actions can help to keep that water safe and clean.
Impacts of Plans
Your local source protection committee, for the Maitland Valley and Ausable Bayfield areas, has prepared drinking water source protection plans. The Province of Ontario has approved these plans which took effect in April of 2015.
These plans help to keep your drinking water safe. Plan policies may require action from you if you are located in municipal wellhead protection area (WHPA) zone A, B or C. Please click on the map link for wellhead protection areas.
Information
Current information is available by visiting the Assessment Reports section of this website. The following is for local information purposes and may be subject to change.
Your Blyth Well System
The following is a description of the Blyth well system:
Well Description
- There are two municipal wells located in Blyth.
- Blyth Well Number One was constructed in 1953.
- Blyth Well Number Two was constructed in 1972.
- Location: Blyth Wells One and Two are located at 201 Thuell Road in Blyth.
- The wells and wellhead protection areas are located in the Maitland Valley Source Protection Area.
- Well Depth: Well Number One is 73.2 metres.
- Well Depth: Well Number Two is 79.25 metres.
Where Does the Water Come From?
The two municipal wells draw groundwater from an aquifer. Aquifers collect water underground much like a sponge collects water. The municipality draws that water from underground through the municipal well.
How is the Water Treated and Distributed?
Treatment:
Ultraviolet radiation and iron sequestration. Operators must adhere to strict requirements for the treatment, testing and distribution of drinking water specified in the Safe Drinking Water Act. Ontario Drinking Water Quality Standards require compliance.
How is the Drinking Water Source Protected?
Ontario’s Clean Water Act, 2006 was created to protect drinking water at the source as the first of several barriers of protection. Other barriers of defence include monitoring, distribution, and the three Ts (testing; treatment; and training of water operators).
The Blyth wells are designed to the following capacity:
Design Capacity
- Well: 13.3 litres per second
- Well: 1,149 cubic metres per day
Use
The wells’ average usage is: 400 to 530 cubic metres per day except 2002 which was 704 cubic metres per day
Ontario Drinking Water Standards (ODWS):
Ontario Drinking Water Standards were met in met in 99.6 per cent of the tests from April 1, 2011 to March 31, 2012. Ontario Drinking Water Standards were not met 100 per cent of the time due to high natural fluoride. Drinking water source protection planning does not deal with naturally occurring threats.
If there is a discrepancy between the information included here and the Approved Amended Assessment Reports, the information in the Assessment Reports usually prevails.
Contact us with your questions, by phone or email, or click on your community link to find maps and information on policy impacts, and how you can help to keep your community’s drinking water safe and clean. Thank you.
Drinking Water Systems
- Atwood Drinking Water System
- Auburn Drinking Water System
- Benmiller Drinking Water System
- Belgrave Drinking Water System
- Blyth Drinking Water System
- Brucefield Drinking Water System
- Brussels Drinking Water System
- Century Heights Drinking Water System
- Clinton Drinking Water System
- Dungannon Drinking Water System
- Gowanstown Drinking Water System
- Harriston Drinking Water System
- Huron Sands Drinking Water System
- Kelly Drinking Water System
- Listowel Drinking Water System
- Lucknow Drinking Water System
- McClinchey Drinking Water System
- Molesworth Drinking Water System
- Palmerston Drinking Water System
- S.A.M. Drinking Water System
- Seaforth Drinking Water System
- Vandewetering Drinking Water System
- Map of Varna Municipal Well WHPAs
- Whitechurch Drinking Water System
- Wingham Drinking Water System
- Zurich Drinking Water System
- Great Lakes Surface Water Intakes