The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

ONLY IN THE AJC: EXPANDED COUNTY-BY-COUNTY COVERAGE

DEKALB: How Dunwoody coped with 3 days of water issues,

- By Tia Mitchell tia.mitchell@ajc.com

Schools, homes and businesses in Dunwoody had to contend with a third day under a boil water advisory, which was ultimately lifted Monday afternoon.

Restaurant owners contacted by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported that the three-day alert caused by a power outage at a DeKalb County water treatment plant required them to adapt and affected their bottom lines.

Mike DiPaolo, managing partner and co-owner of Novo Cucina restaurant in Dunwoody, said customers were down by 20% over the weekend.

To cope with the advisory, Novo managers purchased bottled water and cases of canned soda. They boiled water in large pasta cookers that were used to wash and prep vegetables. Hand sanitizer was placed by each sink in case employees or customers felt unsafe using tap water to wash their hands. That means the restaurant was

spending extra money even as the crowds were smaller than usual, DiPaolo said.

“It’s very disappoint­ing to think a storm would be able to disrupt DeKalb water like that,” he said at the beginning of Monday’s

lunch rush.

All of DeKalb County was under a boil water advisory for most of the weekend, but the alert was lifted for all but Dunwoody on Sunday night.

The advisory went into effect around 10 a.m. Saturday, hours after heavy thundersto­rms caused power outages at Scott Candler Water Treatment Plant in Dunwoody. The county said the first outage occurred at 10:40 p.m. Friday, and there was a second at 2:36 a.m. Saturday.

Backup generators restored electricit­y to the facility within minutes, but water pressure had briefly dropped below the minimum deemed safe. The county says it issued the boil water advisory “in an abundance of caution.” During that time, residents were encouraged to boil water for at least 1 minute to ensure it was free of contaminan­ts.

The advisory was lifted for most of the county around 9 p.m. Sunday after 29 of 30 testing sites confirmed the water was safe. Although no bacteria were present at one Dunwoody location, the results were inconsiste­nt and required additional testing, so the advisory stayed in effect there.

Cafe Sababa in Dunwoody is closed on the weekend, but employees made special preparatio­ns before reopening Monday at lunchtime. That included boiling water used to wash produce and temporaril­y removing iced tea from the menu.

“It is very inconvenie­nt, and it’s a little costly, but you have to live with it,” owner Doni Tamli said.

County officials worked in conjunctio­n with the city of Dunwoody and DeKalb County public schools, which had considered closing campuses. Instead, the school system provided bottled water to the seven Dunwoody schools affected by the alert.

Dunwoody city spokeswoma­n Jennifer Boettcher said the various city, county and school entities shared informatio­n and worked together to notify residents and businesses. Dunwoody also had to ensure its city workers were taken care of.

“Like other businesses, we’re providing bottled water to our employees, including police officers,” Boettcher said Monday. “We’re encouraged by the delivery of thousands of bottles of water to our schools.”

Still, some DeKalb residents are wondering why it took about 12 hours from the initial power outage for a boil water advisory to be publicized.

Ann Abramowitz, who lives in Decatur, said she noticed a temporary loss in water pressure around 9 p.m. Friday. There were no storms near her home, so she shrugged off the incident and continued using water from her tap.

She was surprised to learn about the boil water alert around noon Saturday.

Abramowitz said Monday that she wanted to know more about the protocol the county is required to follow when there are issues at water treatment facilities. She wondered if the county should have been compelled to tell residents sooner.

The county, in a news release Monday morning, said it notified the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division as soon as the issue was discovered. The DeKalb County Emergency Management Agency coordinate­d communicat­ion with various entities, including schools and hospitals.

But the county has not addressed when it decided to issue the boil water advisory and how that took shape.

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