Dayton Daily News

DDN Community Conversati­on: How are we protecting our water for the future?

View panel discussion live on Wednesday on paper’s Facebook page.

- By Ismail Turay Jr. Staff Writer

The Dayton region has a plentiful supply of drinking water that’s critical to the health of our local residents and economy.

That’s why the next Dayton Daily News Community Conversati­on will examine what our local leaders are doing to protect that precious resource.

The Dayton Daily News’ Community Conversati­on: Protecting Our Water for the Future will be held at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday live on the newspaper’s Facebook page. It will be hosted by Dayton Daily News Editor Jim Bebbington and reporter Ismail Turay Jr.

“This region has a long history of effort to protect its water resources and we think it’s important for our coverage now to dig into the next generation of work being done to keep our drinking water clean and our rivers and lakes healthy,” Bebbington said. Panelists will include:

■ Abinash Agrawal, groundwate­r remediatio­n expert and earth science professor at Wright State University;

■ Joe Bates, city of Xenia water treatment supervisor;

■ Becky Benna, executive director of Five Rivers MetroParks;

■ Janet Bly, general manager

of the Miami Conservanc­y District;

■ Stephanie Keinath, vice president of strategic initiative­s for the Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce;

■ Michael Powell, city of Dayton Department of Water director.

The Dayton Daily News’ Path Forward team has been digging into the safety and sustainabi­lity of the region’s drinking water for about two years. That coverage has included stories on the Buried Valley Aquifer — where the majority of communitie­s in the region get their drinking water — and potential threats to it.

In addition, we’ve written extensivel­y about a group of harmful chemicals known as PFAS, or per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances. Dubbed “forever chemicals,” PFAS have been linked to cancer, birth defects and other health issues. The chemicals have been detected in low levels in more than 20 public drinking water systems throughout southwest Ohio.

The newspaper has also dug into the region’s water infrastruc­ture, some of which are a century old. We’ve talked to local municipali­ties about how much treated water is leaked each year because of aging pipes, their plans to repair or replace the pipes and how that may affect water customers’ bills.

The Dayton Dayton News also has looked into the health of the region’s waterways, and how runoffs from agricultur­al and urban developmen­t are affecting them, along with our drinking water. We talked to experts who said the problem will hit taxpayers and property owners in the pocketbook­s to the tune of millions of dollars if more is not done to reduce those storm water runoffs.

The Dayton Daily News also is working with area organizati­ons and agencies to make a difference in the community. As part of the Bee the Change campaign, $1 from every new subscripti­on between April and June will be donated to Five Rivers MetroParks for its local pollinator prairies.

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