Texarkana Gazette

Austin boil-water notice could last 2 weeks, official says

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AUSTIN—Nearly 900,000 people in Texas’ capital may have to boil their tap water for two weeks, an official said Tuesday, as authoritie­s struggled to treat a water supply filled with silt, mud and debris after recent heavy rains and flooding.

Austin’s mayor subsequent­ly suggested that the situation may be under control faster, however, and could be resolved within a “handful of days.”

The Austin American-Statesman reports that Travis County Chief Emergency Management Coordinato­r Eric Carter told a county commission­ers court meeting that 888,000 people may have to wait 10-14 days for the system to settle.

On Monday, the city told 1 million-plus residents to boil water for drinking, cooking and making ice. Officials are also urging drastic reductions in water use and banning outdoor watering, car washing and using water to fill pools and spas.

Austin Mayor Steve Adler tweeted later Monday that officials do “not anticipate our water issues to last beyond a handful of days” depending on consumptio­n rates. The city suggested that calls to conserve water were working.

There has been no indication of bacterial infiltrati­on. But Austin Water warned that insufficie­ntly treated water could contain bacteria, viruses, and parasites that can cause diarrhea, cramps, nausea, headaches and other illness. It said infants, young children, some of the elderly and people with severely compromise­d immune systems would be at risk.

The boil-water notice has prompted a rush on grocery and convenienc­e stores where shelves previously filled with bottled water stand empty. Some restaurant­s closed, while school districts modified their menus to make it easier to use boiled water.

Area jails say they are distributi­ng bottled or boiled-and-cooled water to inmates. In a statement, Travis County said it has 500 cases of water arriving Tuesday for use in lockups and has ordered nearly 4,500 cases to arrive in the coming days, enough for 15,000 bottles per day for a week. It is also working with the Office of Emergency Management “to get a water tanker with the capacity of 3,000 to 5,000 gallons of potable water.”

Neighborin­g Williamson County declared its own emergency Tuesday, allowing officials to create a distributi­on point for providing potable water to about 80,000 people in its territory affected by Austin’s boil water notice and to help affected schools.

 ?? Ricardo B. Brazziell/
Austin American-Statesman via AP ?? ■ Alyssa Aclcala and Katie Killbourne walk four blocks or more from their downtown office Monday after purchasing 12 cases of water from CVS in Austin. The city’s water utility told all residents early Monday to boil water before use until the city’s water treatment system is stabilized. Austin Water customers, which include residents in Austin, Rollingwoo­d and West Lake Hills, need to boil water before drinking it, cooking with it or using it for ice until further notice, city officials said.
Ricardo B. Brazziell/ Austin American-Statesman via AP ■ Alyssa Aclcala and Katie Killbourne walk four blocks or more from their downtown office Monday after purchasing 12 cases of water from CVS in Austin. The city’s water utility told all residents early Monday to boil water before use until the city’s water treatment system is stabilized. Austin Water customers, which include residents in Austin, Rollingwoo­d and West Lake Hills, need to boil water before drinking it, cooking with it or using it for ice until further notice, city officials said.

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