Public health reminds Grey-Bruce residents to test their well water this spring
With spring’s arrival, Grey Bruce Public Health is encouraging those residents with a private well to test their drinking water by taking advantage of Public Health Ontario’s complimentary testing service.
Residents can pick up a well-water sample collection kit and drop off samples at any of the 14 pick-up/drop-off locations throughout Grey-Bruce. Submitted samples are tested by
Public Health Ontario (PHO) for bacterial indicators of contamination, specifically E. coli and total coliforms, which can make people sick and can even be fatal.
“Spring is a perfect time for households in Grey-Bruce that draw drinking water from wells or other private systems, to have a sample of their water tested,” says senior public health manager Andrew Barton.
“Public health advises residents to test their well water at least three times a year, with the best times to test being when the chances of contamination are greatest, such as in early spring, after heavy rains, or during thaw or flooding conditions.”
A map of designated pick-up/drop-off locations for the well-water testing program, along with a courier schedule, is available on public health's
Private Drinking Water web page.
Samples dropped off at the Owen Sound and Walkerton sites are transported each weekday to a PHO laboratory for testing.
Couriers contracted by public health also pick up samples at locations along a Bruce County route on Wednesdays and a Grey County route on Fridays. A PHO courier then takes the samples to a PHO lab.
Water samples must be tested by PHO within 48 hours of collecting the sample. Therefore, residents must collect and drop off their samples as close as possible to the
scheduled courier pick-up time.
Residents can now submit water sample requisition forms on-line, after picking up a collection kit, and receive results on PHO’s
On-line Water Testing Portal within a few days. If submitting a paper requisition form, test results will be available directly from PHO by phone, mail, or E-mail.
If a test returns with an adverse result, residents can call Grey Bruce Public Health for assistance.
PHO’s well-water testing program is not for residents on municipal water systems.
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