South Staffordshire Water Company the first water firm in the UK to provide fully fluoridated water - some honour!
Water fluoridation plant was another first for the area
The plant made South Staffordshire Water Company the first water firm in the UK to provide fully fluoridated water throughout its supply area.
The big switch-on – held on January 22, 1990 – was performed by Sir James Ackers, chairman of West Midlands Regional Health Authority which footed the £2.5m bill for the project.
Sir James said: "Water authorities have always been in health promotion since they first provided good water in Victorian times.
"The great thing about fluoridation is that the evidence about the benefit to teeth is incontrovertible. It is good for the population as a whole."
Margaret Stanhope, chairman of South East Staffordshire Health Authority, said at the time: "I am absolutely delighted. The original agreement with health authorities was signed in 1981 and I began to wonder if we should ever get fluoridation.
"Now it has arrived the benefits are going to be an enormous improvement in dental care."
At the opening, Tony Woodward, a water quality manager, told how the company developed a fluoride monitor to check safety.
He explained how a tanker containing 15-tonnes of acid would arrive at the plant and would go into a special area to prevent danger to public or the environment if there was spillage.
The acid would be diluted to a controllable level and the transfer into the water supply would happen only once in 24 hours so that the dose did not exceed the need.
South Staffordshire Water Company was working on fluoridation long time before the 1985 Act of Parliament gave it the go-ahead and its first plant opened only a month later.
Incontrovertible - really?
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