Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Garfield water woes resolved

- ANNETTE BEARD

GARFIELD — A water leak Sept. 22 which emptied the city’s water tank set and cut off water to a number of customers of a chain of events that kept city employees working throughout the week restoring water to customers and closed Garfield Elementary School on Sept. 23.

What was described by Mayor Gary Blackburn as “the worst possible scenario” with discovery of the site of the water leak as water was found to be gushing up from a crack in the cement of the parking lot at the Short Stop, a convenienc­e store and restaurant along U.S. 62. Water service was restored shortly after 6:30 p.m. the next day with a boil order in effect.

On Friday, more problems were discovered as the pressure regulator valve in the water main off Sugar Creek Road clogged stopping service to customers along that road.

“While I’m just sick about the problems,” Blackburn said, “I’m glad over the way it was handled.”

Blackburn said as of Tuesday all customers have water and there are no boil orders in place.

He said normally water samples have to be taken twice when there’s a leak and the samples sent to Little Rock, Scott Borman with Benton/Washington Regional Public Water Authority had his crew stay late to test at the local lab to curtail the boil order as soon as possible.

Blackburn praised the efforts not only of the city’s employee Gary Wright, but contractor Josh Carney with Big J Constructi­on, Borman, Darshan Hamilton and members of Lost Bridge Water. “It was a group effort,” Blackburn said.

Once the initial leak was discovered, temporary measures were taken to restore water to customers including looping service through the water main on Sugar Creek Road which usually serves 65 customers. With the loop, lines from that main were providing water to 240 customers. That caused a malfunctio­n in the pressure regulator valve and shut off water again.

“Had that not happened,” Blackburn said, “it wouldn’t have manifested itself for years.”

He said a “circuit rider for Arkansas Rural Water” inspected the system Monday and determined the cause of the problem.

Late Sept. 22, Blackburn, who lives near the town’s water tower, said he was the first to notice the problem when he went to wash his hands and didn’t have water. He immediatel­y went to the water tower expecting to find that the altitude valve had shut off the water, a not uncommon experience.

What he found was that the 40,000-gallon water tower was empty. The gauges showed around 50 psi coming in and nothing going out into the system where it should be 11 psi going into the system.

“I saw that the tank was empty,” Blackburn said, explaining that he called city employee Gary Wright and they diverted water away from the tank by going away from the elevation valve to a pressure reducing valve, but the gauge measuring the water pressure going out remained close to zero. “So, we’ve got a big leak somewhere.”

“It’s just shooting into the system,” he said.

“They guys are going around looking for it and they’re going around shutting off valves around town,” Blackburn said. At one point Tuesday night, it was estimated that about 190 of the 268 customers either have low water pressure or no water. He said because of a master meter off Sugar Creek Road, about 70 customers aren’t affected.

“We’ll find it,” Blackburn said.

“Josh Carney is always our back-up. You get a problem like this, two Garys aren’t going to fix it,” Blackburn said.

While investigat­ing late Sept. 22 Wright found the water pressure was acceptable at the Pea Ridge National Military Park and at the Church of Christ, both west of downtown.

“Water is why I’m grey haired,” Blackburn said. “Water is what I think about 24 hours a day seven days a week. I never stop thinking about water.

“For the last year, we’ve been fooling around with this retrofit. There’s just a lot of opportunit­y for things to go wrong. Essentiall­y there’s just Gary and I and we can call in Josh. We’ve got a lot of miles of line,” he said. “I’m not complainin­g. I lived here when we were on the well. I’m glad to have good clean water.”

 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Annette Beard) ?? Garfield Mayor Gary Blackburn checked the gauges on the pump at Garfield’s water tower late Tuesday as city employee Gary Wright and Josh Carney looked for the leak that emptied the city’s water tower, leaving as many as 200 customers without water Sept. 22.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Annette Beard) Garfield Mayor Gary Blackburn checked the gauges on the pump at Garfield’s water tower late Tuesday as city employee Gary Wright and Josh Carney looked for the leak that emptied the city’s water tower, leaving as many as 200 customers without water Sept. 22.

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