Star-Telegram

Fort Worth approves new water safety and sustainabi­lity rules

- BY JAIME MOORE-CARRILLO jmoore-carrillo@star-telegram.com

The Fort Worth City Council on Tuesday approved a flurry of resolution­s and code revisions designed to bolster the safety and sustainabi­lity of the city’s water supply.

City leaders unanimousl­y passed revisions to the city’s water treatment codes in an effort to limit PFAS pollution in public water systems. Council members also adopted updated versions of its 2019 water conservati­on and drought contingenc­y plans to curb water waste as the region’s surging population strains its natural resources.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on April 10 set new national caps on concentrat­ions of six PFAS contaminan­ts in drinking water supplies. At least 49 public water facilities in Texas, including two treatment plants in Fort Worth, exceeded the new maximums. Researcher­s link sustained overexposu­re to the chemicals, man-made creations found in non-stick cookware, fast food packaging and firefighti­ng foam, to decreased fertility and increased incidences of cancer, among other conditions.

The city guidance approved Tuesday morning would, in theory, help curb PFAS pollution in industrial wastewater fed into the Village Creek Wastewater Treatment Facility, a plant that cleans and redirects 166 million gallons of water daily to 23 communitie­s across the Metroplex. The city began ramping up surveillan­ce of the pollutants in May 2023, when the Biden administra­tion first proposed the new regulation­s on the “forever” chemicals (PFAS materials don’t naturally degrade). It’s also begun exploring EPA-recommende­d treatment options, including the use of carbon particles, ion-exchange resin, or high-pressure membranes to filter out the gunk.

“Even though we just have drinking water rules out, we will be looking at the entire water cycle,” Chris Harder, Fort Worth’s water director, told council members after the most recent rule change. “More rules are coming.”

The 2024 Water Conservati­on Plan, approved moments earlier, detailed a roster of programs and regulation­s to limit consumptio­n, not just contaminat­ion. (The Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality, a state agency, requires municipali­ties to update their water planning every five years.)

“In recent years, increasing population and economic developmen­t in North Central Texas have led to growing demands for water supplies,” the plan’s introducti­on reads. “Severe drought conditions in the recent past highlight the importance of the efficient use of our existing supplies to make them last as long as possible.”

The city used around 155 gallons of water per capita each day in 2023, according to the report. The yards, drains, and residents of single-family homes lapped up just over 50% of the city water consumed between 2019 and last year; commercial users accounted for around 34%.

By fine-tuning metering, enhancing leak detection, and educating users about wasteful habits, Fort Worth officials hope to trim the city’s per capita water consumptio­n to 150 gallons per day by 2029. (The city’s 2019 conservati­on plan aspired to reduce daily per capita consumptio­n to 140 gallons by 2024.)

Fort Worth sources its water from the Tarrant Regional Water District. The city’s water department treats and transports the raw water to 1.4 million people in dozens of localities in and around the county.

City leaders Tuesday also formally requested $13.27 million from the Texas Water Developmen­t Board to speed up its yearslong effort to identify and replace lead piping. The resolution didn’t specify the rationale for the grant amount or its intended use.

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