Chattanooga Times Free Press

DeKalb crews fix water main break that caused school closures

- BY CASSIDY ALEXANDER AND JOHN SPINK

Officials have fixed the water main break in DeKalb County that prompted school closures and depleted water pressure since early Friday.

Water service was returned to residents on McClendon Drive around 3 a.m. Sunday after the broken pipe was repaired, according to the DeKalb County Department of Watershed Management.

“Customers experienci­ng brown water should run the faucets inside and outside their homes/businesses to clear internal plumbing,” county officials said.

Water spilled into the residentia­l area around the 800 block of McClendon Drive throughout Friday morning. Watershed Management crews were able to isolate the break and stopped the flow of water.

But by late afternoon, crews worked to remove a large tree at the site of the break that was impeding their effort to make the repairs, county officials said in a statement.

A pallet of bottled water was available near the intersecti­on of McLendon Drive and North Avenue for customers affected by the break as of 1:40 p.m.

City Schools of Decatur, which has about 5,500 students, closed all schools and offices Friday and notified families the repairs were expected to take at least five hours. Most Decatur schools had no or low water pressure, the small school system stated. And officials expect the pressure would decrease “due to the magnitude of the water main break.”

Some children were already at school when the issue occurred, and district officials urged parents to pick their children up as soon as possible. After-school activities and athletics were also canceled.

Students and staff at five schools in the larger DeKalb County School District were relocated to other schools while the break was being fixed, district officials said. Avondale Elementary, DeKalb Elementary School of the Arts, DeKalb School of the Arts, McClendon Elementary and Robert Shaw Elementary have sent out communicat­ions advising parents of the relocation. Students will receive lunches at the accommodat­ing schools.

Amber Dixon, whose children are in kindergart­en and fifth grade at McClendon Elementary in the DeKalb County School District, was picking her children up from the school Friday morning. The school had no running water, she said.

“I’m sure they’re dealing with a lot,” she said. “There’s obviously parents who don’t have any other options.”

In her neighborho­od near the school, Dixon said some people were trapped inside their homes because of the water outside their homes.

Emory University alerted students Friday morning that the water main issue may result in “some slight discolorat­ion to the water” because of sediment in the line. “The campus water supply remains safe to drink and use,” Emory police said in a social media post

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