Press Release
December 18, 2025
The Government of the Northwest Territories (GNWT) has received lead testing results for École Boréale School in Hay River, Chief Sunrise School in Kátł’odeeche First Nation, and Deninu School in Fort Resolution.
École Boréale School in Hay River
Testing has confirmed that all water fixtures show lead levels below the maximum acceptable concentration (MAC) set out in the Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality.
No remediation or mitigation measures are required, and École Boréale School can use sinks and water fountains normally.
Chief Sunrise School in Kátł’odeeche First Nation
Testing has confirmed that some water fixtures show lead levels above the maximum acceptable concentration (MAC) set out in the Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality. As a result, the Office of the Chief Public Health Officer (OCPHO) has issued a Public Health Order for the school.
Effective immediately, affected water fixtures and water fountains at Chief Sunrise School will be out of service, and an alternative drinking water source will be provided, where it is not already in place.
The GNWT is taking the following steps to address the issue:
Deninu School in Fort Resolution
Testing has confirmed that some water fixtures show lead levels above the maximum acceptable concentration (MAC) set out in the Guidelines for Canadian Drinking Water Quality. As a result, the Office of the Chief Public Health Officer (OCPHO) has issued a Public Health Order for the school.
Effective immediately, affected water fixtures at Deninu School will be out of service and an alternate drinking water source will be provided, where it is not already in place.
The GNWT is taking the following steps to address the issue:
Water testing at École Boréale, Chief Sunrise School, and Deninu School is part of the GNWT’s commitment to test drinking water in every school in the territory. A priority-based protocol guides the order in which schools are tested, based on factors such as facility age, previous water quality information, and the age of students. While the protocol determines sequencing, the commitment remains the same: all schools will be testing using a science-based approach that reflects Health Canada’s guidance and the conditions of the North.
When GNWT staff are already scheduled to travel to a community, and testing can be incorporated, the GNWT may proceed at that time, even if the school was not identified among the highest priorities.
The GNWT will support an Education Body that chooses to safely provide alternate drinking water as a precaution while testing and remediation continue. The GNWT will reimburse reasonable, cost-effective expenses so that no school hesitates to act out of concern for budget impacts.
The GNWT remains committed to ensuring safe drinking water in all schools and will continue monitoring systems, conducting regular testing, and sharing updates as the territory-wide testing program progresses.
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For media requests, please contact:
Manager, Public Affairs and Communications
Department of Infrastructure
Government of the Northwest Territories
jacqueline_mckinnon@gov.nt.ca
867-767-9082 ext. 31166
drinking_water_results_interpretation_ecole_boreale.pdf
drinking_water_results_interpretation_chief_sunrise.pdf
drinking_water_results_interpretation_deninu_school.pdf
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