The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Boil water notice lifted in borough

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt@21st-centurymed­ia. com @PottstownN­ews on Twitter

POTTSTOWN » The boil water advisory in Pottstown was lifted Saturday morning and repairs to the broken 20-inch water that caused it are expected to be completed this afternoon.

Brent Wagner, Pottstown’s utilities director, said the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Environmen­tal Protection, which has oversight over the water system, gave permission for the boil water notice to be lifted at 6:30 a.m. Saturday.

DEP required tests of Pottstown’s water supply to show negative evidence of biological contaminat­ion for two consecutiv­e days before the boil notice could be lifted, according to the borough notice posted at 7:30 a.m.

North Coventry Township Manager Erica Batdorf said at 11:45 a.m. Saturday that the boil water advisory remains in place for North Coventry Water Authority customers while DEP conducts tests on the water there, which is purchased in bulk from the Pottstown system.

She indicated it is expected to be lifted later in the day.

Wagner said the broken piece of pipe alongside the King Street bridge was removed overnight and a replacemen­t piece is being installed.

Completion of the repairs was estimated for between 3 and 4 p.m. Saturday.

Manatawny Street, which remained closed at the intersecti­on with King Street, is to be opened once the repair is complete.

The repairs were made necessary by the accidental damage to the main Wednesday by the constructi­on crew working to replace the King Street bridge over Manatawny Creek.

Those repairs were delayed because efforts to shut valves on the main in two different locations were only partially successful, meaning the main had to be repaired with water still moving through the pipe.

Wagner said in the more than 25 years he has worked for the borough, he has never seen a break cause the loss of so much water.

“I would estimate we were losing between 25,000 and 50,000 gallons per minute when it first broke,” Wagner said. “It drained down the tank on Washington Street hill in less than two hours.”

Re-filling those tanks, which supply the pressure that keeps the water coming out of the showerhead in a nice steady stream, had to be done carefully, Wagner said.

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