The Columbus Dispatch

Austin issues boil-water notice

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AUSTIN, Texas — Residents of the Texas state capital were ordered to boil their tap water before drinking after flooding in recent weeks filled the lakes that supply Austin with silt, mud and debris.

The city of Austin said in a statement Monday that the water needs extended filtration and treatment before it will be safe to consume.

Austin Water’s more than 1 million customers have been told to boil water intended for drinking, cooking and making ice, and to avoid drinking fountains. The San Antonio Water Service, which depends on artesian wells, is sending more than 5,000 gallons of drinking water in tankers to Austin.

There is no indication of bacterial infiltrati­on. However, Austin Water warned that insufficie­ntly treated Third-grade students at Bee Cave Elementary School in Austin, Texas, hold up their water bottles during lunch Monday. The school had more than 92 cases of bottled water ready to pass out to students in light of the boil order instituted by the city.

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 also would be at risk.

The boil-water notice prompted a rush on bottled water at grocery stores such as H-E-B, where shelves were emptied of supplies.

Starbucks shops suspended service of any coffee and espresso until the boil-water notice is

lifted. The shops will continue to serve bottled and packaged products.

Mayor Stever Adler said “the unpreceden­ted rain and runoff through our entire lake system has simply overwhelme­d our treatment capacity.”

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