Chattanooga Times Free Press

Water service restored to rural Tennessee town after a week

- BY ADRIAN SAINZ

MASON — The majority of residents in the rural Tennessee town of Mason had water services restored Wednesday, a week after freezing temperatur­es broke pipes and caused leaks in the decades-old, neglected water system.

Mayor Eddie Noeman told The Associated Press that 75% of the predominan­tly Black west Tennessee town of 1,300 people has had water restored, with the rest expected to be able to use their faucets by Wednesday night or Thursday.

A winter storm brought subfreezin­g temperatur­es and snow to Mason and the rest of Tennessee last week. The cold caused the town’s pipes to freeze over and break, creating leaks that lowered water pressure and left many residents without running water. The cold exposed major problems with a water system that dates back to the 1950s, the mayor said.

Noeman said no money had been invested in the town’s water system since 2010.

Residents filled up jugs and buckets at the homes of relatives and friends who live in the area but did not lose water service.

“Everybody came together for the town of Mason. We’ve had these problems for a very long time.”

Many either bought water or picked some up at giveaways by the fire department and local churches.

“Everybody came together for the town of Mason,” Noeman said. “We’ve had these problems for a very long time.”

Larry Camper, 69, still did not have water restored to his home as of Wednesday afternoon, so he filled plastic jugs with water from a spigot outside City Hall. Camper said also received water from the mayor and melted snow that stayed on the ground for days after the storm. He said he stockpiled water before the storm because Mason has previously had outages.

“It should have been fixed long before this,” he said.

Mason has been beset by problems with infrastruc­ture and financial mismanagem­ent for years. Two former employees were charged with taking town funds, and the state comptrolle­r’s office has said the town had thousands of dollars in missing credit card expenditur­es.

In 2022, the state of Tennessee moved to take over Mason’s finances. But officials later reached an agreement that allowed the local government to retain control of its spending.

Noeman said the town had been losing six million gallons of water a year to leaks, but 45 leaks have been repaired since he took office a year ago. A Missouriba­sed company took over the water system in October, and no problems had been reported until last week’s storm, he said.

The state has given Mason $1.9 million to improve its water system. Along with the town’s 1,300 people, Mason also provides water to residents who live nearby in unincorpor­ated areas of Tipton County.

“Some people called me very, very, very upset about it,” Noeman said of the water outage. “But when I explained to them what the situation was and how we reached this point, people understood.”

More than two dozen water systems in Tennessee were placed under boil-water notices during the recent cold snap. Nineteen counties in the state reported operationa­l issues with their water utilities, the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency said.

— EDDIE NOEMAN, MAYOR OF MASON, TENN.

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