Especially when everyone's so eager to explain it away. Hastings District Council quickly proclaimed all of Havelock North's failed tests for E coli anomalous, a result of the monitoring process rather than actual contamination.
Farmers have been equally staunch in denying land use impacts - from dairy intensification in particular - may contribute to town water pollution. Even the ministry uses language in its report to downplay the results.
But, regardless, standards exceedences are trending upward. An extra 0.4 per cent - 20,000 people (and 92,000 overall) - were drinking unsafe water in 2012 compared with 2010. And that's just the bacteriological result; a similar number of supplies failed on chemical contamination grounds.
Which fits with the galloping degradation of our waterways and aquifers. Two-thirds of all rivers, lakes and streams are now deemed unsafe to drink from, due to the spread of giardia and the like.
As many are affected by high levels of nitrogen and phosphorous and silt from farming run-off, causing native plants and fish to die and gumming up rivers with algae and rocksnot.
With three-quarters of all freshwater used for agriculture and more demanded, surface and in-ground flows are depleted and cannot recover, putting town supplies at risk.
What are industry and authorities doing about this crisis? Fiddling.
Water storage schemes are needed, but not as drivers for further damage. Unfortunately, that's what Hawke's Bay Regional Council's Ruataniwha scheme promises, with vastly-increased nitrogen levels - to cater for intensification - in the Tukituki setting up a disaster when (not if) heavy rains carry retained phosphorous into the mix.
Farmers continue to prevaricate around fencing and riparian planting, replacing the "clean streams" accord - which dismally failed to meet its 2012 targets - with a new "sustainable" dairy accord: a toothless sop extending compliance timeframes out as far as 2030.
And government is chiming in with RMA changes making decisions on water management achievable through a "collaborative" process at regional level; superficially a positive for local democracy, but sure to be captured by vested interests - with extremely limited rights of appeal.
In short, no one - save some on the sidelines - is taking this water crisis seriously. Instead they're proceeding with measures that will only exacerbate it.
Meanwhile, National has downsized the climate change research budget to a miserly $4.5 million.
Perhaps rather than long white we're in cloud cuckoo land.
That's the right of it.
Bruce Bisset is a freelance writer and poet.