Houston Chronicle Sunday

Scores go for years without potable water

- By Sarah Plummer

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The chemical spill in January that contaminat­ed drinking water for 300,000 West Virginians around Charleston has brought national attention to issues of water safety. But many rural West Virginians outside the reach of the spill have been living without tap water for drinking for months — or even years.

The residents of Bud, a small town in southern Wyoming County, haven’t been able to drink from the tap for six months, ever since the owner of Alpoca Water Works — the small water plant that had served the community for decades — died.

When that happened, the plant shut its doors, and the water situation “deteriorat­ed rapidly,” said state Sen. Daniel Hall, a Democrat who represents the affected area.

“It is a terrible situation that should not have happened and those people fell through the cracks. It is taking time to get resolved, but it will

be,” Hall said.

Regional water authoritie­s say they don’t know when Bud’s 430 residents can expect to drink tap water again.

“There are still a lot of hoops we have to jump through. We have to have a bond closing and go through the steps to purchase the system,” said William Baisden, general manager for Logan County Public Ser- vice District, which provides water to rural areas of Logan county. The county is in the process of taking over the system in conjunctio­n with East Wyoming.

Lack of money, crumbling infrastruc­ture and the deteriorat­ing quality of well water have left scores of rural residents in southern West Virginia without tap water that is safe to drink or bathe in.

Mavis Brewster of the McDowell Public Service District, which provides water to 3,000 customers, said there are scores of small municipali­ties with water systems that have in use since the coal boom of the 1930s. Those systems are disintegra­ting, with old pipes breaking frequently. Residents often are under water-boil notices or experience water outages.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 people in McDowell County do not have access to clean tap water or suitable well water, she said.

“I’m 54 years old and, as long as I can remember, people have collected water from a spring or old mine source up on U.S. Route 54 in Maybeury. Any time of day, you can see trucks loading their tanks,” she said. Road-side collection sites are often a single PVC pipe jutting out from an embankment.

The McDowell water district just completed a $3.5 million federally funded project to bring water to 500 customers who had never had tap water on Bradshaw Mountain, Brewster said. Residents there had been paying $30 per 1,000 gallons of water hauled to their homes. A new water treatment plant is set for the towns of Northfolk and Elkhorn and will serve about 850 customers, Brewster said.

Summers County Commission­er Jack David Woodrum said some residents in his southern county face poor water quality or well contaminat­ion from septic systems that empty near or into water systems. Many have water filtration­s systems that are costly and must be replaced on a yearly basis because the water corrodes them so badly.

Several projects in Summers County are on hold until funds can be secured. “The biggest problem we face regarding water is that infrastruc­ture money is slated to be cut in half. The 2015 state budget will cut funds from $40 million to $20 million,” Woodrum said.

“Nine counties in the Kanawha Valley experience­d a terrible thing to be without clean water,” he said, referring to the Charleston-area water crisis. “But it is an experience that rural West Virginians experience every day.”

David Cole, executive director of Regional I Planning and Developmen­t Council, which serves the six southernmo­st counties including McDowell, estimates it would cost more than $250 million to meet top priority water and sewage needs in the region. But grant funding is even harder to secure for many of these small, rural towns where population­s are aging and dwindling, Cole said.

 ?? Steve Helber / Associated Press file ?? State worker Al Jones tests the water in the state Capitol in Charleston, W.Va. A chemical spill has put the spotlight on other water woes in the state.
Steve Helber / Associated Press file State worker Al Jones tests the water in the state Capitol in Charleston, W.Va. A chemical spill has put the spotlight on other water woes in the state.

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