The History of
Swim Drink Fish
Meet The Founder
Mark Mattson
Mark Mattson is one of Canada’s most seasoned environmental lawyers and the founder of several water charities, including Swim Drink Fish. In addition to being Swim Drink Fish’s President, he is the Waterkeeper for Lake Ontario, a water quality advisor to the International Joint Commission, a board member for the US-based Waterkeeper Alliance, and a member of Ontario’s Great Lakes Guardians Council.
The Beginning
In the spring of 2000, seven people died and thousands became sick after drinking contaminated tap water in the town of Walkerton, Ontario. That tragic event became the catalyst for a new commitment to protecting water in Ontario and a personal call-to-action for the founders of Swim Drink Fish.
Mark Mattson was a lawyer who practiced criminal and environmental law. He represented clients trying to protect their communities from landfill sites, hydroelectric development, and industrial waste of decades ago. Mark, alongside Swim Drink Fish co-founder Krystyn Tully (then a student studying radio and television arts and campaigning for environmental and fair trade nonprofits on the side), were swept up in the public inquiry that helped to trace the origins of the Walkerton tragedy and develop new rules to ensure Ontario’s drinking water supply would be protected in the future.
Mattson had been investigating and prosecuting environmental crimes for years before the Walkerton water tragedy. He’d worked with the Ontario Ministry of the Environment as well as volunteering his time to assist residents and nonprofits in polluted communities. Mattson’s knowledge of hydrology, chemicals, water quality and decision-making grew with each case.
In 1996, he started a volunteer group dedicated to giving meaning and force to environmental laws. With a number of lawyers, water experts, and volunteers, they conducted their own investigations and brought private charges against polluters. The first case was against the City of Kingston for an old landfill that was leaking into the harbour. The volunteer investigators then took on cases in Deloro, Hamilton, and Montreal.
Mattson knew from his work in environmental law that Ontario and Canada had (at the time) some of the best environmental protection rules in the world. The main problem was lack of enforcement.
By investigating environmental crimes and training other people to do the same, Mattson and his friends were proving that people didn’t have to wait for government to do the right thing. And by focusing on water pollution offences, Mattson discovered he could trigger a variety of environmental restoration activities promoting cleaner water, land, forest, and habitat.
Lake Ontario Waterkeeper: The Early Years
By 2000, Mattson was one of a handful of people enforcing environmental laws in Canada. He found kindred spirits in the Waterkeeper Alliance movement growing in the United States. The association of independent Riverkeepers, Baykeepers, Soundkeepers patrolled and protected their local watersheds. Each “keeper” advocated for enforcement of environmental laws and defended their waterbody with the same passion Mattson felt for Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence River.
Mattson decided to follow their lead and create a grassroots organization focused on protecting his local waterbody: Lake Ontario. Tully agreed to help.
Lake Ontario Waterkeeper was established in February 2001. In June, its first patrol boat was launched from Wolfe Island on Lake Ontario. The boat, named for Angus Bruce, a Kingston-area resident who worked with Mark on his first environmental hearing, was acquired through loans from friends and family and from donations made by Hamilton Ontario environmentalist Lynda Lukasik using money awarded on the Rennie Street landfill case in Hamilton.
The “Angus Bruce” immediately proved its value. The first summer on the water was game-changing.
With cases piling up, the Lake Ontario Waterkeeper team started to grow.
Growth
In 2002-2003, Lake Ontario Waterkeeper became an independent registered charity. Once again, friends and family helped Mattson and Tully by helping them set up an office, form a board of directors, and become a professional organization.
Waterkeeper’s first major grant came from the Law Foundation of Ontario. The Foundation provided seed funding for the Clean Water Workshop, a program that trained pro bono law students to help develop environmental cases. The program grew from two students to 25 at its peak, attracting students from five law schools.'
Mark championed the Waterkeeper model in Canada and mentored law students working on cases for Lake Ontario Waterkeeper’s peers.
Mark’s mentor Doug Chapman started Fraser Riverkeeper in Vancouver, supported by a talented young environmental lawyer named Lauren Brown Hornor. Karen and Kevin Lowe founded North Saskatchewan Riverkeeper in Edmonton. William Tozer became the first Riverkeeper in the north, working on the Moose River. Mattson was a founding board member for these organizations. (Fraser Riverkeeper and North Saskatchewan Riverkeeper are now officially Swim Drink Fish initiatives.)
Waterkeeper soon reached a point where it had more law students registered for the program than communities with the capacity to push cases forward.
When you have an organization full of people who know and safeguard their water bodies, the communities on those waterbodies stand a better chance in the long run. But starting a group isn’t the right solution to every problem. Waterkeeper was realizing that success was best measured by the number of people working for water, not the number of organizations.
Environmental Law Rollbacks
Water is so important to Canada’s history, culture, and economy that many of the nation’s earliest laws were passed to protect waterways. In the 1970s, “environmentalism” became a global movement and governments around the world created environmental departments to protect air, water, and habitat.
Cuts to environmental programs began in Ontario in the 1990s and slowed slightly in the wake of Walkerton. Then again, around 2012, sweeping changes to federal laws gutted protections for the environment, especially water.
Up to that point, the Waterkeeper program had focused on training specialized advocates like young lawyers. They would identify a threat to water quality and participate in the appropriate formal process, like a private prosecution, an environmental assessment, or a licence review.
When sweeping changes to environmental law made those kinds of targeted interventions less powerful and less accessible, Mattson and Tully began looking for avenues and solutions beyond the legal process alone.
It was time to focus on building a broader movement of people with authentic connections to water who could work to safeguard a swimmable, drinkable, fishable future.
Emergence of technology
As luck would have it, the internet and mobile web technology provided just the opportunity the movement needed.
For years, people had been asking Waterkeeper “Where can I swim in Lake Ontario?” It was people’s number one question, partly because the lake had a history of water quality issues and partly because people in urban areas had a difficult time finding beaches near them.
Staff had been tracking beach locations and water quality monitoring results for a few years, releasing annual reports to show which beaches met government guidelines and which failed.
The reports were helpful research tools, but they didn’t help people find a beach in real-time or tell them if a beach met water quality standards when they wanted to swim.
With funding from RBC, Waterkeeper created a free app for early versions of the iPhone that let people see the list of beaches and most recent water quality results on Lake Ontario. Built entirely by staff and volunteers, the app called “Swim Guide” showed how technology could help reconnect people to water and nurture a new generation of water leaders.
Within weeks of its launch, the first version of Swim Guide had more than 10,000 users and was being featured by Apple as one of Canada’s best apps.
Within a year, Swim Guide had expanded to major cities in Canada and the United States, with dozens of affiliate organizations contributing data to the platform.
Other early forays into technology included the Swim Drink Fish music club, an online music service with an annual membership benefiting Swim Drink Fish, and the Living at the Barricades podcast that also ran on campus radio networks 2007-2010.
Working with artists
Before the Angus Bruce even hit the water, the Rheostatics, The Tragically Hip, Steven Heighton and other artists offered their support for the cause.
Musician and writer Gord Downie was one of the leading spokespeople for the organization. He dove into legal casework, fundraising, and artistic performances in an effort to build a movement and protect water. Downie was a board member at the time of his death in 2017.
Since 2012, more than 200 painters and photographers have donated works that raised $1,360,000 for Swim Drink Fish initiatives. Those funds helped to propel the reach of the organization’s work far beyond the boundaries of Lake Ontario.
Turning Point: Becoming Swim Drink Fish
The National Water Centre officially opened in New Brunswick in fall 2014 to help thought leaders and artists devise new ways to build a movement of people working for water and to highlight the important role water plays in society.
That year, the number of people using Swim Guide and Waterkeeper’s programs hit 1-million for the first time.
With Swim Guide expanding rapidly and artists spreading the word everywhere they went, the organization’s programs split into two streams: there was the local advocacy work to protect Lake Ontario, as well as the apps and program models that could be adapted by other communities to replicate its local activities.
Mattson and Tully began thinking about the coming years and how best to support the growing movement.
Swim Drink Fish was the obvious answer. The phrase had been the organization’s mission from the very beginning and captured its mission perfectly.
Swim Drink Fish describes the organization’s vision for the future: swimmable, drinkable, fishable water for everyone. It is also a reminder of the organization’s roots in environmental law.
Communities need access to swimmable, drinkable, fishable water to thrive. Water is a necessity, not a luxury.
As it turns out, pushing people away from the water didn’t protect people.
In November 2017, the organization’s new brand was unveiled. Lake Ontario Waterkeeper, Fraser Riverkeeper, North Saskatchewan Riverkeeper and its digital platforms were all consolidated under the name “Swim Drink Fish”.
Swim Drink Fish Today
Swim Drink Fish is here for people each step of the way, helping them connect with the water, collect and share data, and restore swimmable, drinkable, fishable water for all.
The organization focuses on using technology to connect people with water and nurture the next generation of water guardians.