CTC Source Protection Documents PDF Print E-mail
The CTC Source Protection Committee is responsible for guiding the development of three major pieces of work: Terms of Reference, Assessment Report and Source Protection Plan. 

Public consultation plays an important role at every stage of the process.  We encourage you to Contact Us and join our mailing list, or subscribe to our RSS feed and receive up to the minute updates on Source Water Protection.

Terms of Reference

The Terms of Reference outlines who does what, when it will happen and how much it will cost. It will guide the Source Protection Committee through the completion of the Assessment Report and the Source Protection Plan. The Terms of Reference is a work plan and budget that identifies:
  • The drinking water systems being included in the source protection planning process;
  • A list of technical studies and tasks required to identify vulnerable areas and risks to drinking water within these areas (Assessment Report);
  • A list of tasks required to develop land use planning policies, risk reduction strategies and monitoring activities to address risks to drinking water in vulnerable areas (Source Protection Plan);
  • A list of matters affecting neighbouring watersheds that need to be worked on together;
  • Who will coordinate the technical and planning tasks (municipalities, conservation authority staff or a partnership between the two); and
  • Cost estimates and a schedule for completing all required tasks.
For more information on the Terms of Reference review Terms of Reference, O.Reg. 287/07

Assessment Report

The Assessment Reports provides the scientific foundations for developing Source Protection Plans.  The Assessment Report will look at technical findings, including:
  • Where are drinking sources threatened?
  • How significant are the threats?
  • Regional Water Budgets
  • Characterization Reports
  • Examination of wells affected by surface water

Source Protection Plans

The Source Protection Plans will be the culmination of the Source Protection Committee’s work and will set out policies to protect water quantity and quality now and for the future.  These policies may consider issues like:
  • Should some areas be set aside from development?
  • What do we do with source protection areas already designated for development?
  • What do we do with areas that are already developed?
  • How do we plan for future water uses?
  • What actions need to be taken to address existing threats?