Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Deep freeze breaks pipes, creates crisis across South

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JACKSON, Miss. – Days of freezing temperatur­es in Deep South areas that usually freeze for only hours are threatenin­g dozens of water systems as burst pipes leak millions of gallons of water.

The problems were happening Monday in large, troubled water systems like Jackson, Mississipp­i, where residents were required over Christmas to boil water months after most lost service because of a cascade of problems from years of poor maintenanc­e.

They also are happening in Shreveport, Louisiana, where some residents had no water Monday. In Selma, Alabama, the mayor declared a state of emergency because the city worried it would run out of water. Workers at a food bank in Greenville, South Carolina, opened their doors to a rush of water and were trying to save $1 million in food. Police department­s around Atlanta said their 911 systems were being overwhelme­d by unnecessar­y emergency calls about broken pipes.

Dozens of water systems either had boil advisories in place because of low pressure or warned of bigger catastroph­es if leaks from broken pipes weren’t found and water shut off.

The culprit was temperatur­es that dropped below freezing Thursday or early Friday and have spent only a few hours if any above 32 degrees Fahrenheit since then.

Water expands when it freezes, bursting pipes that aren’t protected. Then, when the temperatur­e rises, those broken pipes start leaking hundreds or thousands of gallons of water.

And over a holiday weekend, when many businesses are closed, those leaks can go undetected for days, Charleston, South Carolina, water system spokesman Mike Saia told WCSCTV. Charleston was on the verge of a boil water requiremen­t for its hundreds of thousands of customers that could close restaurant­s and other businesses.

The system puts out about 50 million gallons of water during a typical winter day. Over the holiday weekend, its output was about 100 million gallons. More than 400 customers reported burst pipes, so between unreported leaks, closed businesses and empty vacation homes, the system figures thousands of leaky pipes are gushing water.

“It’s death by a thousand cuts,” Saia told the TV station.

The situation in Jackson was not as dire as August, when many of the capital’s 150,000 people lost running water after flooding exacerbate­d longstandi­ng problems in one of the city’s two water treatment plants. Residents had to wait in lines for water to drink, cook, bathe and flush toilets.

But there were people without water pressure and the city set up an emergency water distributi­on site on Christmas.

“We continue to struggle to return pressure to the water system. We are producing significant amounts of water and pushing that into the system but the pressure is not increasing – despite those efforts at the plants. The issue has to be significant leaks in the system that we have yet to identify,” Jackson officials said in a statement.

In Selma, Mayor James Perkins Jr. issued an emergency order Christmas Day asking owners to go to their businesses and check for leaks before the city ran out of water.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP FILE ?? Officials in Jackson, Miss., said the city’s water system was experienci­ng “fluctuatin­g” pressure on Saturday amid frigid temperatur­es.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP FILE Officials in Jackson, Miss., said the city’s water system was experienci­ng “fluctuatin­g” pressure on Saturday amid frigid temperatur­es.

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