Baltimore Sun

Clear answers could be hard to come by

Expert says it’s possible city never finds bacteria source

- By Christine Condon

When it happened, grocers said the rush on bottled water was equivalent to what they saw just before New Year’s Eve during the Y2K scare. It was February 2000, and some Baltimore residents had been told to boil their drinking water.

The city — and the world — had passed Jan. 1, 2000, without a predicted massive computer breakdown based on the concern that some older systems couldn’t distinguis­h between dates in different centuries.

Now, Baltimore was grappling with the news that 1.5 million gallons of water hadn’t been properly filtered at the Ashburton Water Filtration Plant. But after residents cleared store shelves of the bottled kind, the city reported four hours later that the inadequate­ly filtered water had been diverted out of the drinking water system and there was no threat to public health.

“Like Y2K, the fear was worse than reality,” The Baltimore Sun wrote at the time.

Some 22 years later, the city’s next boil water advisory spanned about four days, after city officials discovered E. coli contaminat­ion in drinking water samples from three buildings in West Baltimore. More than a week after the advisory was lifted, though, officials still don’t know precisely what caused the string of positive E. coli tests on Labor Day weekend.

The Department of Public Works has said the problem didn’t stem from one of the city’s three treatment plants this time. So, the search for the source turned elsewhere, including to the miles of pipes below ground that transport water from treatment plants and holding areas to faucets around the city and in neighborin­g counties.

The size of the system complicate­s the quest for clarity, officials say, and raises the possibilit­y that the city may not be able to definitive­ly identify the point of contaminat­ion.

“The conclusion of our investigat­ion may not yield one definitive source, if you will. It might be a combinatio­n of sources,” said Yosef Kebede, the department’s bureau chief for water and wastewater, during a City Council hearing Thursday about the contaminat­ion. “And we may have to follow that by saying that, ‘We have a high degree of confidence,’ as opposed to saying that definitive­ly: ‘This is the source.’ ”

A department­al analysis of the problem could come soon, Kebede said.

“I wouldn’t say months. I would say maybe a couple of weeks,” he said.

It’s possible the department never will conclusive­ly trace the source of the bacteria, said Upal Ghosh, a professor in the University of Maryland, Baltimore County’s chemical, biochemica­l and environmen­tal engineerin­g department.

For example, there could be areas within the city’s pipes where water wasn’t moving, allowing bacteria to grow as chlorinati­on decayed, Ghosh said. A change in pressure elsewhere in the drinking water system could have caused bacteria in such sections to bleed into the larger system, Ghosh said.

After the positive E. coli tests, officials flushed out the system with more chlorinate­d water than normal to kill any harmful bacteria, letting fire hydrants gush water onto streets around the neighborho­od. That removes potentiall­y contaminat­ed water and replaces it with more recently treated water.

“You would not know retrospect­ively what specific section that was,” Ghosh said. “But maybe people who understand how the network works — the potential points where water could be sitting and stagnating for a period of time to cause something like this — will be able to figure

it out.”

In the West Baltimore neighborho­ods at the epicenter of the crisis, Harlem Park, Sandtown-Winchester and Midtown-Edmondson, the city’s lackluster communicat­ion about the contaminat­ion stirred distrust, and vague answers may not improve matters.

The city first received a positive E. coli result in Harlem Park on the Saturday before Labor Day. Regulation­s required it to retest the water before sounding the alarm. But even after a test confirmed Sunday the presence of the potentiall­y hazardous bacteria at three buildings, communicat­ion didn’t go out to the public until Monday morning. Even then, it was via a series of tweets and Nextdoor posts that city lawmakers have blasted as insufficie­nt.

It was the latest public challenge for the city’s Department of Public

Works, which has struggled to manage its wastewater treatment plants, causing pollution woes in the Back and Patapsco rivers, and to pick up garbage and recycling in a timely fashion during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The department says its search to pinpoint the origin of the water contaminat­ion continues in earnest. Public Works Director Jason Mitchell said there were two water main breaks in that area that could have contribute­d, and a number of constructi­on projects were underway. Officials also are exploring other, previous disruption­s in the water infrastruc­ture to determine whether they could have played a role, including sinkholes at the foot of the Ashburton Dam and along North Avenue.

“We’re looking at all the constructi­on activity and all the things that were going on to figure out what could

have reduced the chlorinati­on levels,” Mitchell said.

In a system where the average age of pipes hovers around 75 years old, water main breaks are an important possible culprit to evaluate, since they can lower water pressure, said Birthe Kjellerup, an associate professor at the University of Maryland’s department of civil and environmen­tal engineerin­g.

Maintainin­g pressure is a key part of the system, she said, because if breaks happen, water needs to rush out — not in.

“Baltimore is famous for water main breaks — and those are just the mains that we hear about here and there,” she said. “With that old infrastruc­ture that is in Baltimore, it is not unlikely that even though it is a pressurize­d system, that there could be some leaks, because it’s only as safe as any kind of break.”

Kebede said public works

staffers also are investigat­ing whether the problem could have started at the Vernon Pumping Station near Druid Hill Park, which was taken offline in late August for a repair and brought back online Sept. 5.

That station pumps treated water stored in Druid Hill Lake into a zone that includes the parts of the city and county that fell under the boil water advisory. But only three sites ever tested positive for E. coli or coliform, all of them in those West Baltimore neighborho­ods.

Drinking water in Baltimore comes from three reservoirs in Baltimore County — Loch Raven, Liberty and Prettyboy — before being treated at one of the city’s two treatment plants. From there, the water either flows through the pipes by gravity to homes and businesses, or it is stored for pumping at places like Druid Hill Lake.

As the search for answers persists, water sampling efforts have returned to their normal frequency, Kebede said.

The area that was covered by the recent boil water advisory was last tested for E. coli on Sept. 13 as part of routine monitoring efforts, and came back negative, Kebede said. The city has 90 sample sites, and each one is tested weekly, said Jack French, a spokesman for Democratic Mayor Brandon Scott, in a statement.

Because the boil water advisory has passed, the city is allowed to return to its normal testing regimen. But officials could consider additional testing in the affected area to bolster confidence in the system as they continue to search for the source, Kjellerup said.

“Good practice would be to do that more frequently,”

Kjellerup said. “So, step it up. Double it. Triple it. Something about that.”

That being said, the department’s repeated negative tests in those key neighborho­ods are a clear indication that lifting the boil water advisory was appropriat­e, Kjellerup said.

“It is common practice to do exactly what they did — and should be common practice. And I understand that people might be worried that it’s not sufficient,” she said. “But as far as I understand, they have had multiple days, maybe a week of continuous monitoring, seeing that there is no E. coli in multiple samples.”

During Thursday’s hearing, Kebede said officials focused on flushing the system to ensure chlorine is more evenly distribute­d throughout.

“We’ve ensured that there is better blending to make sure that there is adequate chlorine residual, but we haven’t necessaril­y upped the dosage at the plants,” Kebede said. “It’s a balancing act. Too much chlorine contribute­s to what we call disinfecti­on byproducts, which are carcinogen­ic. So, we have to be within a sweet zone, if you will.”

Drinking water currently leaves the city’s treatment plants at a concentrat­ion of about 1 milligram of chlorine per liter, French said. Raising it to 2.5 milligrams per liter would require notifying dialysis centers, since the more heavily chlorinate­d water could endanger their patients. Raising it to the EPA’s maximum of 4 milligrams would require a public notificati­on, French added.

 ?? ?? Two water storage tanks under constructi­on in 2021 at the west end of the lake in Druid
Hill Park in Baltimore. Drinking water in Baltimore comes from three reservoirs in Baltimore County — Loch Raven, Liberty and Prettyboy — before being treated at one of the city’s two treatment plants. From there, the water either flows through the pipes by gravity to homes and businesses, or it is stored for pumping at places like Druid Hill Lake.
Two water storage tanks under constructi­on in 2021 at the west end of the lake in Druid Hill Park in Baltimore. Drinking water in Baltimore comes from three reservoirs in Baltimore County — Loch Raven, Liberty and Prettyboy — before being treated at one of the city’s two treatment plants. From there, the water either flows through the pipes by gravity to homes and businesses, or it is stored for pumping at places like Druid Hill Lake.
 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS ?? Water is flushed from a hydrant in front of Fire Station 8 in Baltimore. The size of the water system in Baltimore complicate­s the quest for clarity on this month’s E. coli outbreak, officials say, and raises the possibilit­y that the city may not be able to identify the point of contaminat­ion.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN PHOTOS Water is flushed from a hydrant in front of Fire Station 8 in Baltimore. The size of the water system in Baltimore complicate­s the quest for clarity on this month’s E. coli outbreak, officials say, and raises the possibilit­y that the city may not be able to identify the point of contaminat­ion.

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