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Earth United States

The Water Crisis Cities Don't See Coming (axios.com) 121

Aging water treatment systems, failing pipes and a slew of unregulated contaminants threaten to undermine water quality in U.S. cities of all sizes. Still, with only a handful of exceptions, "water systems aren't designed to focus on health, they're focused on cost-containment," says Seth Siegel, whose book "Troubled Water," released this month, examines the precarious state of water infrastructure in the U.S. From a report: Whatever goes down the sink, shower, washing machine and toilet is transferred to one of about 14,000 U.S. wastewater treatment plants. While those plants are good at neutralizing sewage microorganisms that can make people sick or pollute waterways, they can miss chemicals that are linked with our changing lifestyles. The biggest change since most treatment plants were designed? The explosion of pharmaceutical use by Americans, Siegel told me during an interview in Axios' office. About 60% of American adults take at least one prescription pill every day, per the National Center for Health Statistics. Residue from those pills travels to treatment plants and waterways. Water testing often doesn't accurately reflect the risks of tap water, and testing processes can be manipulated to show passing results.
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The Water Crisis Cities Don't See Coming

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  • has amazing reporting [youtube.com] on the Flint, MI water crisis and the developing crisis in New Jersey. [youtube.com]

    And no, it is not the case that the cities don't see this coming. Everybody in civil engineering knows about it but we've slashed taxes to the bone so there's no money to pay for what is basically a new water system. Not until old people start dying from Legionnaire's and kids start getting brain damage from lead that is. Heck, Flint _still_ doesn't have clean water.
    • Here in Minneapolis, our water system is self-funded by the fees the water department charges to water users. It's not funded by taxes, so it's not subject to the kind of damage done by declining tax revenue/tax cuts or diversionary spending.

      And if I believe the propaganda the water department puts out, we have one of the best water systems in the country, with state of the art filtration technology.

      They've also been involved in a multi-year project to re-line water mains. They did the ones on our street

      • You pay for each gallon you use, and for each gallon of wastewater you return dirty.
        To finance you part of the system you use, plus a small share of costs that can't be split down to only what you use.

        How else would you do it?

        • I can totally see many places either rolling it into the tax system or charging water fees that don't pay 100% of the water plant costs.

          Tax-based water systems could exist where the usage fees can't cover the costs due to a variety of reasons (not enough subscribers due to individual wells or just low population) or some idea that water is a right and should be really cheap.

          It could also be that some places have just incredibly poor metering and can't actually arrive at a unit cost that works or would be se

          • by spun ( 1352 )

            So this "tax based water" theory of yours is really just pure speculation? Personally, I have never lived in any part of the US where I did not pay a monthly water bill. Have you?

            In the interest of injecting some facts, I found this site: https://www.watereducation.org... [watereducation.org] which is interesting, as it shows there are far more costs to water delivery and treatment that I had though about, like the cost of taking apart old and failing dams, or retrofitting them with fish ladders. It looks like most water compan

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        My water system is a pipe out of the lake. I've got a pretty nice particulate/activated charcoal system plus a UV anti bacterial sanitizer.

        [Sigh]. When this news reaches the public utility infrastructure contractors, I'll have to go to a few more community meetings. And hear why we really need a pipeline built down our road from the end of the city system. For a property assessment of somewhere between $50 to $100K per residence. So we will have the privilege of paying $100 per month for water that they pu

        • by spun ( 1352 )

          My parents got hit with a double whammy after buying a new house many years ago. The builder installed the septic system drainage field upside down, so over the course of about ten years, the pipes filled with dirt. The house is next to a wetland. My dad was ordered to pay $40,000 to replace the system and perform mitigation. As with many residential developments, the builder was a partnership that was dissolved soon after completion of the project, leaving no one to sue.

          The very next year, the city install

      • by jrumney ( 197329 )

        Here in Minneapolis, our water system is self-funded by the fees the water department charges to water users. It's not funded by taxes, so it's not subject to the kind of damage done by declining tax revenue/tax cuts or diversionary spending.

        That also means they probably only have the revenue stream that they need for maintenance and incremental improvement, not for big capital expenditure on replacement of reservoirs or trunk pipelines between the reservoirs and treatment plants.

    • Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)

      by rlauzon ( 770025 )

      Flint spent decades on failed social programs instead of plans to upgrade their infrastructure. Then they pissed off their biggest source of income: GM. GM left, taking many of their workers with them - along with their tax money.

      You are correct that everyone knows this is coming, but no politician in power wants to spend the money on it. Because it won't be done during his term, so he can't take credit for it.

    • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

      Sorry, which community anywhere has "slashed taxes to the bone"? Anywhere I know of taxes are higher than ever and always going up faster than inflation.

  • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @11:20AM (#59318938)

    By drinking this water, you're basically getting access to a whole cornucopia of expensive meds for free. Without any effort on your part, you're able to treat or ward off scores of maladies all at the same time. This is a win/win for everybody!

    • By drinking this water, you're basically getting access to a whole cornucopia of expensive meds for free.

      If only homeopathy worked.

      • It's not homeopathy though, it's a detectable level of medication.
        So it is possible it actually does something, unlike homeopathy. Maybe it will turn all the frogs gay?
    • Free Drugs? What's next, Free Healthcare? And then it's just a short step off the precipitous peak that is Free College and we're all doomed I tells ya.
  • by BytePusher ( 209961 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @11:36AM (#59318998) Homepage
    We need to privatize all access to water. Businesses are clearly better and more efficient at everything.
    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @11:54AM (#59319110)

      Businesses have shown to suck at offering infrastructure based services.
      What are often the top hated companies.
      Cable TV/Internet
      Power Companies
      Telephone Companies

      All these companies we hate because they have to maintain a large infrastructure, they are trying to maximize profits, they do this by pushing infrastructure fixes as long as they can, so you will get a few years of good service then an outage that lasts a few days. Because the infrastructure rotted away.

      Government is actually much better at infrastructure especially if there is general support for taxes to go towards it. As that few day outage will effect their election results, vs a companies which would be a fraction percent drop in revenue.

      That said, not all things are better run via the government. There are products and services that improve due to competition and self interest to sell a product better then someone else, and the fact that the company needs to earn every cent, means less waste in providing that product or service.

      • Businesses have shown to suck at offering infrastructure based services.

        Cellular companies, though sometimes incompetent, also generally work pretty well.

        That's because there is competition.

        A few decades ago, I was able to get fiber to my house from a small company called Wide Open West, instead of Comcast... vastly faster than cable modems at the time. They were an awesome service provider. Until they got subsumed by another company and there was no longer competition, so I was stuck with Comcast.

        It's n

        • Infrastructure companies tend to become monopolies (or at least oligopolies) over time, by the nature of the services. It usually takes tremendous amount of capital to build the infrastructure and there are economies of scale, which tends to discourage new entrants, which allows the incumbents to build themselves to such a size as they can just buy new companies as they come.

          I agree that competition would make it better, but competition in infrastructure is more likely government created than not; monopol
        • Just because you can't think of a solution doesn't mean there is one. Well, I can't think of a practical model for water supply competition either, other than something like heating oil where every house has a tank that the service keeps filled. Well, ok, I can think of a way. True it is hard to conceive of parallel pipes ever working. We do have a partial competition model in electricity though, via a shared grid where consumers choose their source provider.
        • Cell companies success is due to a smaller infrastructure footprint. A tower every 10+miles. Which is the normal distance between town centers. One down tower is easy to find and fix. While Cable, Water, Roads. will need hundreds or thousands of miles of infrastructure for every 10 miles radius to cover all the customers. Also many cell companies will rent towers from other companies anyways, so they are not building a tower every 10 miles. but perhaps every 50 miles, and rent from their competitors in a

      • Businesses have shown to suck at offering infrastructure based services.

        US passenger rail might suck, but US freight rail (which is privately-owned) operates very well.

        Basically the entire Internet network is run by business. The backbone has been very reliable, and the worst thing I could point to is government involvement (NSA surveillance).

        Anecdotally, I've been quite happy with the service provided by my water, electric, and gas transportation providers, all of whom have 99.9%+ uptime (note: I'm not with PG&E).

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        Businesses have shown to suck at offering infrastructure based services.

        But they make a load of cash providing the infrastructure. And leaving the operations to the local utility (public or private).

      • to sell a product better then someone else

        It's illegal to sell people :-)

    • You get the same ineffective monopolism ... PLUS profit (aka the part that you get nothing in return for, like with robbery).

      Yeah. Sounds great.

      Besides: The "government" IS already a corporate council at this point. So if you're saying they are doing shit ... ... ;)

    • I know you were trying to be snarky, but actually economics seems to be proving you right.

      For some reason despite people being forced by government to pay for city water, they nevertheless pay private firms VAST sums to drink their water instead.

      https://recipes.howstuffworks.... [howstuffworks.com]
      Water Is Free. Why Do Americans Spend Billions on the Bottled Stuff?

    • Especially businesses which are granted de-facto monopoly status. The water utility, the cable company, the garbage service, the municipality tax collection companies... These are the paragons of efficiency.

      Dont forget job creator. Yes, that's important. Give all the taxes to and target tax cuts to the corporations. Because they are the job creators.

    • by dargaud ( 518470 )
      All those drugs are highly reactive chemicals. I have a hard time thinking it's not easy for the average chemist to find ways to have them react to some basic compound (oxygen ? ozone ? H2O2 ? fluoride ? chlorine ? Whatever) that will neutralize them. This just needs to be added to a process which is just basically decantation so far.
      • Highly reactive? You never studied organic chemistry did you? Most drugs effect signaling pathways, which is more like how puzzle pieces fit together than melting and smelting. The actual biochemical reactions are managed by the cells themselves using ATP as the energy source, in response to signaling chemicals, then are metabolized by various enzymes such as MAO-A/B, aldehyde dehydrogenase 2, etc. Enzymes, from a chemistry point of view, might as well be magical.
        • by dargaud ( 518470 )

          Highly reactive? You never studied organic chemistry did you?

          Well, I did, but I was bad at it... And to my defence that was a long time ago.

          • Fair. I recently took up an interest in the subject. Well, here's a simple thought experiment. If it has a decently long shelf life, it does not oxidize readily or react strongly with water. If it doesn't burn your flesh, it doesn't have a high or low ph. Most medicine can't be highly reactive, because that would be harmful to human life or difficult to produce and distribute/administer before decaying. A significant number of medicines are stabilized salts. You might see hard-to-pronounce-name-(HCl/Acetate
  • by cellocgw ( 617879 ) <cellocgw&gmail,com> on Thursday October 17, 2019 @11:38AM (#59319010) Journal

    More important - you can replace "water" with "bridges," "electric grid" , "school buildings," "fire trucks," .... anything that a town or state gov't has to pay for is either ignored or gets shouted down by the "no more taxes" crowd.

    • by Tempest_2084 ( 605915 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @11:43AM (#59319044)
      My main problem with raising taxes is that they NEVER go to what they say it's going to go to. You want to raise taxes for to fix the roads, fix the infrastructure, revamp schools, etc. that's ok, things wear out and need to be replaced I understand that. The problem is that they want to raise taxes and put it into a 'general fund' that they assure you will go towards roads, bridges, water plants, etc., but just ends up going into some politicians slush fund or pet project for their city. There are ways around this, but they won't do it.
      • The problem is that they want to raise taxes and put it into a 'general fund' that they assure you will go towards roads, bridges, water plants, etc., but just ends up going into some politicians slush fund or pet project for their city. There are ways around this, but they won't do it.

        That depends very much on the state. In this state, the half cent transportation sales tax is earmarked in the law and is only spent on roads and bridges. Maybe you need a better state legislature.

        • In this state, the half cent transportation sales tax is earmarked in the law and is only spent on roads and bridges. Maybe you need a better state legislature.

          I don't think you understand how it works. When the earmarked transportation sales tax comes into effect, they reduce the general funds that were previously going into roads and bridges. They simply freed up general funds for their pet projects.

      • by sarren1901 ( 5415506 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @11:58AM (#59319128)

        In Cali we raise gas taxes and then dump the revenue into light rail that the vast majority of will never use because it just is not practical.

        The closest trolling stop to me is 5 miles away from home. The trolling ride to the station closest my work is about two hours. Then another 3 miles from station to work. If I take my bike with me, I could probably do the biking portion is 30 minutes each way.

        So we are looking at nearly 5 hours every work day.

        Or I could just enjoy my car and cut that down to about an hour and 15 minutes of commute time.

        Unless you double the amount of traffic, triple the price of gas and double the price of cars, this isn't changing.

        • by HiThere ( 15173 ) <[ten.knilhtrae] [ta] [nsxihselrahc]> on Thursday October 17, 2019 @12:20PM (#59319224)

          I'm sorry it doesn't work out for you, but when the BART tube was closed for repairs the traffic to SF came to a standstill, because the streets were too congested for anything to move. Everyone in the area was quite relieved when it was running again.

          I will admit that there are LOTS of edge cases, and I don't know how to solve the problem. But in lots and lots of places the answer is not more streets and roads.

          FWIW, commuter rail used to be a lot more widespread, but the railroads didn't like having to deal with passengers, and lobbied congress to let them sell off the business (which they had only originally agreed to take on in order to get the free land to build the railroads on).

          Rail lines don't make a lot of sense where the population is widely dispersed, but where it's concentrated they are essential, and will be until someone comes up with something else that will carry as many people in as small a footprint. Monorails have trouble switching and aren't any cheaper anyway.

          Additionally, for the BARTD counties of California, the funding is via sales tax. Part of that sales tax is on gasoline, admittedly, and the justification is that it gets lots of cars off the road. (This was experimentally proven true during the BART repairs.) But the real reason was political, and I am neither capable nor willing to defend that process.

        • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

          In Cali we raise gas taxes and then dump the revenue into light rail

          Nice try but in California, gas taxes and other road user fees only cover 61.8% [taxfoundation.org] of the cost of the roads. The rest comes out of other taxes such as Prop K, Measure M, and TransNet sales taxes.

          In Texas they once did the math and found that in order to make the roads pay for themselves, they would have to increase the gas tax to $2.22 per gallon [archive.org]!

        • from decreased congestion. The reduced traffic lowers your driving cost since stop & go is the most expensive type of driving (most gas, hardest on your car).

          And if the Trolly isn't useful to you that sounds like a problem that can be solved with more stops/trollies.
      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        Sometimes they do, but there are secondary changes that nullify the intent. When we voted a special tax to fund the libraries, that money did, indeed, go to the libraries, but they immediately cut the amount from the general fund that had been going to the libraries to compensate.

      • My main problem with raising taxes is that they NEVER go to what they say it's going to go to.

        No, your problem with rising taxes is that you think the pittance of a rounding error actually makes a difference in a complex and large budget. Taxes in the USA are a complete joke, good for making a quick buck and not handing over anything to the evil government while your infrastructure falls apart around you. If you actually raised taxes in any way that mattered you may actually see a difference.

        Quite often though raising taxes doesn't actually raise the net income for the government, who simply lowered

        • There should only be a need to raise taxes for expansion, maintenance and such should not need higher rates each year if the taxes actually go to what they are supposed to go to (instead they usually get siphoned off for some pet project).

          Taxes aren't the joke, the budget allocations are.
        • >>No, your problem with rising taxes is that you think the pittance of a rounding error actually makes a difference in a complex and large budget.

          Wow, thanks for clearing that up. I didn't know that's what I was really thinking. I'm glad we have people like you to tell people like me what they're REALLY thinking.
      • My main problem with raising taxes is that they NEVER go to what they say it's going to go to. You want to raise taxes for to fix the roads, fix the infrastructure, revamp schools, etc. that's ok, things wear out and need to be replaced I understand that. The problem is that they want to raise taxes and put it into a 'general fund' that they assure you will go towards roads, bridges, water plants, etc., but just ends up going into some politicians slush fund or pet project for their city. There are ways around this, but they won't do it.

        Yep. As long as there is a single "diversity officer" or what have you on staff, I don't want to hear about any government or school supposedly being starved of cash. They clearly have more than enough of my and my neighbors' money.

      • by Miser ( 36591 )

        ... and the taxes never sunset and return to their previous rates.

        I agree with the poster above, that it's fine to raise taxes - replace your bridge, fix your road. When the project is done and/or enough taxes have been collected for that project, turn the tax off/revert to previous rates. But no! That never happens.

  • Not new info (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Rakhar ( 2731433 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @11:39AM (#59319020)

    Public water has been a worry in a lot of places for a long time. The biggest sign that we're fucked is that people will spend $1000+ a year on bottled water without batting an eye, but flip out if asked to pay taxes to update water systems.

    And that's exactly how beverage corporations want it.

    • Re:Not new info (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Gilgaron ( 575091 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @12:08PM (#59319180)
      I live in a city with an international macrobrewery, and it is my understanding that their lobbying is part of why cities where they have such breweries have excellent water. This has also fueled the microbrewery industry locally since they don't have to mess with the water supply to make good craft brew. So the beverage companies actually drive improved water where they are based out of, anyhow.
      • Selling poisoned water is bad business unless you're the only business in town selling water. Coke and Co. have a lot to lose from bad water, but the local water company is like "ehhh whats bactererer?derrrp" cause they don't even have to try to suck on the government teet, they are force fed.
        • Re:Not new info (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Rakhar ( 2731433 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @03:27PM (#59320000)

          How much do you pay for a gallon of water from your local utility company? How much does a gallon of Aquafina water cost?

          How much profit does your local utility company make, even if you include taxes? How much profit does PepsiCo make on the same amount of Aquafina?

          • by Rakhar ( 2731433 )

            I can't honestly believe that you think your interest would be better served if PepsiCo or Nestle were the primary suppliers of water.

      • by Rakhar ( 2731433 )

        That's a good thing for consumers and those companies. Keep supporting them.

        There is still the matter of Nestle and the like who sell essentially filtered tap water. I should have specified the water part, but this being a story about water... Bottled water has exploded in the market, and demand is driven largely by sub standard local water, or news of sub standard water somewhere else.

        Regardless how you feel about those corporations, or their markup on bottled tap water, it's hard to argue that consumer

  • I have just one quetion: How can lawyers form a class action lawsuit over it so they can suck hundreds of millions of dollars out of local communities?

    Follow the money.

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @11:46AM (#59319056) Journal
    As a side-bar to this discussion: am I the only one who is disturbed by the apparent fact that "About 60%" of American adults are on at least one prescription medication every day?
    • I think someone misread someone else's study. I can find a Mayo clinic report that upwards of 60% of Americans took a prescription pill within the last month. But not 60% every day year round.

    • I know that about half of US students take hard drugs that have been prescribed to them or aquired otherwise, "to enhance learning".

      The vast majority of 35-40+ people probably have cardiovascular problems due to bad nutrition and probably take blood pressure medication. If they each take two pills, e.g. to balance side-effects or badly counted, because you have to take two a day, you probably already have that number.

      Then there are all the pain killers, and all that psychoactive shit like Xanax, that "are

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        Well, I didn't when I was in that age group, but currently I take 11 pills a day. Some of them are non-prescription, but were recommended by a doctor anyway. Two I decided to take on my own after reading various studies. OTOH, I'm over 60. But if you average me into the population (or average me over my lifetime) 2 pills a day is probably conservative...though not by much. In my 40's or 50's there was a while when I took a combination of vitamin pills rather than a multivitamin.

      • Not to mention about half of them are probably also taking another kind of prescription, every day. (well, 3 weeks out of the month.)

    • A friend of mine works for a company that makes a machine that fills prescription bottles automatically. It's a huge thing with conveyer belts and machine vision and hoppers full of hundreds of types of pills, and he told me that it could automatically fill, label, and ship over 30,000 prescriptions an hour, 24 hours a day. Who is talking all of those pills, I asked him. He replied that I was the only person he knew who was not taking at least one pill a day. Part of it is my father was a doctor, and he
    • I don't know the numbers, but there is a baby boom of people who are probably on some form of high blood pressure medication. That's pretty normal as it is mostly an unavoidable problem and treating it has large benefits. The figure cited isn't necessarily an indication of huge amounts of frivolous medication.
    • As a side-bar to this discussion: am I the only one who is disturbed by the apparent fact that "About 60%" of American adults are on at least one prescription medication every day?

      No, not really.

      There was (thankfully it seems to be dying down a little) a whole industry devoted to hyperventilating about "too many" people taking antidepressants, for example, yet depression is a real medical syndrome and it needs to be treated.

      You don't hear people getting all upset about "too many" people taking beta blockers (or whatever), even if their tough grandpappies didn't take any.

  • How would you go about removing pharmaceuticals from the water at that scale? I assume distillation would remove or break down a great deal of pharmaceuticals, but probably not all, and is totally impractical at scale.
    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      I guess distillation would do it. But distilating water is very expensive. That's why we don' use distilation to desalinate ocean water.

    • Re:How (Score:4, Informative)

      by Areyoukiddingme ( 1289470 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @12:08PM (#59319182)

      How would you go about removing pharmaceuticals from the water at that scale? I assume distillation would remove or break down a great deal of pharmaceuticals, but probably not all, and is totally impractical at scale.

      Conventional sewage treatment breaks down 90% of things like ibuprofen and naproxen [harvard.edu]. Drinking water treatment breaks down acetaminophen and carbamazepine by 75%. Current treatment regimes knock antidepressants, antipsychotics, antibiotics, beta blockers, and tranquilizers down to trace amounts. Detectable, but just barely, and not enough to affect people. The same kinds of treatments that are intended to kill nasty bacteria are also quite effective at breaking down anything that isn't water.

      For a lot of what's in the water, a longer treatment cycle is all that's required. Both ends of water treatment are designed and intended to break down complex organic molecules, and do quite a good job of it, and that's what drugs are, whether over the counter or prescription.

    • Ideally with biomass that could break it down enzymatically, but with some sorts of things that might be tricky.
    • by bob4u2c ( 73467 )

      How would you go about removing pharmaceuticals from the water at that scale?

      For a start, how about requiring every pharmacy must contain a disposal container(s). Just like those you have at Best Buy, Office Max, and Office Depot for recycling used electronics. Some medications might be to dangerous to allow the consumer to toss it in with the others, so you might need to have the pharmacy directly take expired medications. However, if when you pick up new medications you could get rid of your old stuff I think more people would use this method instead of throwing it out or flus

  • I have seen several articles about people flushing their old medications down the drains. This has led to both plant and animal life being adversely affected. It get's into our ground water, river, lakes, and oceans. So many side affects from this practice. There are safe disposal places for your old medications, but I see very few that are visible on a daily basis. Drug stores would be a good place for them to be located.

    Most area's that I have lived, they are always in a cycle of replacing gas/water/s
  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @12:08PM (#59319178)

    "About 60% of American adults take at least one prescription pill every day,"

    Holy hell!
    So more people are badly ill in the US than are healthy?
    Ore more take pills they would not or do not need?

    I'd call that a national state of emergeny! And nobody blinks an eye??

    • No because in Capitalism when you sell the cure to the disease you caused it's profits all the way to the bank.
    • remove birth control from that number and I'm sure it's much more reasonable (albeit still really high.)

      • I was thinking the three major contributors to the problem were: High blood pressure, cholesterol, anti depressants. Did not even think about birth control, but you are right.
      • by jbengt ( 874751 )
        About 28% of women [google.com] of child bearing age in the US use birth control pills. With women being about half the population, and about half of them being child bearing age, birth control would account for maybe 7% out of the 60%, actually less since some of them would already be counted for taking other prescription medications
    • by bob4u2c ( 73467 )
      From that stat the only thing I can conclude is, I'm way under medicated!

      About the only prescription I take is when I get sick and need to take a Z-PAK for an infection. That happens about once a year, and I only need to take it for 5 days.
  • Some of the drugs being used are effective at parts per trillion concentrations.

    Good thing the fish dont believe in homeopathy, else they will be zoning out on prozac.

  • by stabiesoft ( 733417 ) on Thursday October 17, 2019 @01:14PM (#59319446) Homepage
    Here in Austin, it is a city service. Forget the drug problem. In the past year the system has been hit with two surprises. The first was heavy rains that added too much turbulence to the water so the intake filters were getting clogged. Water usage was restricted. You'd think they might have seen that one coming. The second is an invasive marine mussel has hit the waterways. They got into the intakes and literally made the water smell like waste water. It was only half of the city, and the claim was it was still potable. A friend had it happen to their water and they stopped showering it was so raunchy. They did not drink it. They used bottled. And this is a city that prides itself on green/enviro issues and is a city service. Problem is the city can't help itself and raids the profits of the water and electric utility it "owns". I doubt a private enterprise is going to be any better. Heck the new idea is for hedge funds to buy up water rights. Mad Max was not too far off the mark.
    • The water is indeed still potable.

      As it happens your city government is even doing things about the odor and taste.

      Some people can taste that zebra mussel, some can't. We get that taste in our city water in hot summers. Not nice

      Thinking you have a "mad max" level of problem is just bein a snowflake. You'll live.

      • If you lived in the part of town serviced by that treatment plant, I don't think you could have drank it. Maybe you have no sense of smell. IDK. I was not in that part of town. Everyone I knew in that part of town could not drink it, shower in it, do laundry in it. But hey, everyone I know must be a snowflake eh? The city *knew* it had a problem and was working fast to fix it. BUT it could have been predicted (and was by some water people) that the mussels were going to get into the inlet pipes and create t
    • it's terrifying that, rather than build desalinization plants to prep for the coming water shortages in the American Southwest, we've got Vulture Capitalists (almost literally) looking for ways to profit off the shortage.
  • Because we can totally trust the equipment and processes used to purify and produce bottled water.
  • This must be the latest case of life imitating art: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] (Dr. Strangelove's water fluoridation communist conspiracy to sap our precious bodily fluids).
  • Give it a few years, and levels of the more popular prescriptions in our water supply will eliminate the need for anyone drinking city water to actually take compounds like atorvastatin, lisinopril and sildenafil. This will introduce a new problem: if people stop taking these meds, the city will now have to start adding them to the water so everyone doesn't come down with heart attacks, strokes and impotence.

  • I've been using reverse osmosis to reduce TDS's to less than 10 ppm for a couple decades, and for 15 years before that I used a distillation system. What people don't realize is that Sodium Chloride puts a limit on how many times used water can be recycled by standard sanitation plants. On average, water is recycled about 6 to 8 times before the Chloride rises above 1,500 ppm, which is when the water begins to taste salty and people refuse to drink it.

No spitting on the Bus! Thank you, The Mgt.

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