News
Articles
Case Histories
Buyer's Guide
Career Center
December 2008
November 2008
Arsenic
Bottled Water
Disinfection
Membrane Filtration
Click here for a subscription to
Water Quality Products
Give us your feedback on our site.
Change your subscription info
Subscribe to our
WQP/WWD Executive News Summary e-Newsletter.

News this week sponsored by: Siemens Water Technologies

INDUSTRY NEWS
 Share It
"../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=wqp&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=14788&linkLabel=Tennessee%20Town%20Ran%20Out%20of%20Water" target="_new">   "../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=wqp&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=14788&linkLabel=Tennessee%20Town%20Ran%20Out%20of%20Water" target="_new">Email this page to a friend
 
 More News
  • AWWA Announces Media Relations Seminar
  • Appeals Court Upholds Damages in Milwaukee Sewer Lawsuit
  • Geospatial Holdings, Inc., Enters into Agreement with Reduct NV
  • Groups Partner For Water Efficiency Research
  • Chemical from Chlorine Tanks Taints Stockton, Calif., Water
  • National Ground Water Awareness Week Scheduled for March 8 to 14
  • AWWA Webcast to Focus on Advanced Metering Infrastructure
  • Iowa Considers Water Quality Law Changes
  • MACTEC Names Alaska Office Manager
  • Bio Clean Environmental Brings on New Sales Manager
  • Tennessee American Water Monitors Post-Spill Water Quality
  • Massachusetts Offering Coastal Water Quality Grants
  • Alaska Companies Agree to Pay for Wetlands Violations
  • NGWA Urges Obama to Include Water Infrastructure in Economic Stimulus
  • New AWWA Publication Addresses Pharmaceuticals in Water
  • Call for Speakers -- Autovation 2009
  • Organizations Sign MOU to Monitor Dental Amalgam Discharge Reduction Program
  • Procter & Gamble and PSI to Provide Safe Drinking Water to Zimbabwe
  • Oregon State Researchers Improve Wastewater Drug Test
  • Pentair to Cut 10% of Workforce
  • EPA Recognizes Water Efficiency Leaders
  • Black & Veatch Wins Civil Engineering Award for Environmental Excellence
  • EcoWater Acquires Crisma
  • EPA Administrator Johnson Applauds Jackson Nomination
  • Purolite Receives ISO 9001:2000 Certification for U.S. Facilities
  • Black & Veatch Opens Office in Milwaukee
  • MWH to Upgrade Tallahassee Treatment Facilities
  • VUEWorks & InfraMetrix Form Technology Partnership
  • Beverage Container Recycling Report Evaluates Major Beverage Companies
  • EPA to Host Webcast: Compost as a Best Management Practice
  • Aqua America Plans $280 Million Infrastructure Improvement Program
  • PSI Announces New System Administrator
  • Alquimia Develops Innovative Waste Treatment System
  • Proposed Drilling Raises Concerns About New York Water Supply
  • K2 to Build Bleach Plant at Dow Site in Pittsburg, Calif.
  • Detroit Water Compromise Reached
  • WEF Announces Disinfection 2009 Specialty Conference
  • EPA Releases New Vessel Discharge Permit
  • Valley Water Named Best Overall by California's Flex Your Power Campaign
  • WEF Encourages Water Advocates to Support Infrastructure Funding
  • Timmons Group Adds New Associate
  • U.S. EPA Region 10 Soliciting WEI Proposals
  • Uranium Contamination Reported in Connecticut
  • Chester Engineers Acquires Business Units
  • Puget Sound Energy Implements Online Customer Service Center
  • WQA Aquatech USA 2009 to Emphasize Strategies for the Future
  • More Restrictions on Pumping Water from Northern California
  • NGWA 2008 Expo and Meeting Posts Strong Numbers
  • Geospatial Holdings Appoints New President & COO
  • EPA Determines New Standards Needed to Protect the Mississippi River in Missouri
  • IFAT Moves to a Two-Year Cycle
  • Water Market Report Predicts Long-Term Growth
  • EPA Announces Finalists for Gulf of Mexico Improvement Grants
  • Fisher Tank Co. Marks 60th Year in Business
  • Economic Stimulus Should Include Water and Wastewater Funding, WWEMA says
  • Bord Na Móna Awarded New Odor Control Contracts in the UK & Italy
  • Siemens Purchases Sole Rights to ITT’s Portacel Product Line
  • EPA Enforcement Actions Yield $11.8 Billion in FY 2008
  • Barack Obama Selects Environmental Team
  • HDR Announces Appointments in Pittsburgh Office
  • Kansas City Water Department Gets $1.4 Million for Storm Water Project
  • Nelsen Corp. Draws Final Winner in Vacation Sweepstakes
  • Waters Corp. Acquires Analytical Products Group
  • USGS Study Shows Chemicals Remain in Drinking Water After Treatment
  • Tetra Tech Selected for Fox River Sediment Remediation Program
  • Siemens to Provide Coal-Bed-Methane-Produced Treatment System in Wyoming
  • Illinois EPA Warns Against Fraudulent Inspectors
  • Water Shut-Off Notices Double in Detroit Since Last Year
  • Black & Veatch Project Wins Conservation Award
  • New Initiative Focuses on Mississippi River Basin Water Quality Improvement
  • EPA Releases Ground Water Rule Corrective Actions Guidance Manual
  • Vacon to Build New Factory in Pennsylvania
  • EPA Proposes Renewing Permit Variance for San Diego’s Point Loma Plant
  • CH2M HILL OMI Appoints Two Executives to Top Management Team
  • Public Water Utilities Recognized For Excellence
  • Bord na Móna Introduces New Wastewater Technologies
  • Sensaphone Features Wireless Remote Monitoring System
  • Texas Team Wins Operations Challenge 2008
  • Basin Water Unveils Environmental Treatment Products
  • Siemens Announces Product Line Additions
  • ITT Announces Partnership With Global Relief Agency
  • Philadelphia Mixing Solutions Announces New Mixer Drive
  • BioPetroClean Exhibits New Bioremediation Solution
  • CH2M HILL's Senior Vice President Will Receive WEF Award
  • Mayor Daley Delivers Keynote Address at WEFTEC
  • Fluid Conservation Systems, Datamatic Announce Partnership
  • Water Dealer Ned Jones Inducted into WQA Hall of Fame
  • WQA Aquatech 2008 Wraps Up
  • Kinetico Launches Expandable Treatment System at Aquatech
  • WQA Identifies Major Issues for 2008
  • WQA Awards Water Quality Industry Advocates
  • Flowban Takes Delivery of First Production Units
  • BASF to Feature Water Treatment Solutions
  • Sales Presentation to be Held at WQA Aquatech
  • Severn Trent Services Awarded Contract for Desalination Plant in Mexico
  • Cruise Ships Reach Agreement With Washington DOE
  • World Bank Supports Improving Water Supply in Tajikistan
  • Water Service Company Blamed in Ireland Death
  • U.S. Navy Ordered to Reduce Drinking Water Chemical Levels
  • CH2M HILL Names Team Leader and Technology Director

  • All Current News
  • Archived News
  • Tennessee Town Ran Out of Water

    November 5, 2007

    As twilight falls over this Tennessee town, Mayor Tony Reames drives up a dusty dirt road to the community's towering water tank and begins his nightly ritual in front of a rusty metal valve. With a twist of the wrist, he releases the tank's meager water supply, and suddenly this sleepy town is alive with activity. Washing machines whir, kitchen sinks fill and showers run.

    About three hours later, Reames will return and reverse the process, cutting off water to the town's 145 residents.

    The severe drought tightening like a vise across the Southeast has threatened the water supply of cities large and small, sending politicians scrambling for solutions. But Orme, about 40 miles west of Chattanooga and 150 miles northwest of Atlanta, is a town where the worst-case scenario has already come to pass: The water has run out.

    The mighty waterfall that fed the mountain hamlet has been reduced to a trickle, and now the creek running through the center of town is dry.

    Three days a week, the volunteer fire chief hops in a 1961 fire truck at 5:30 a.m. — before the school bus blocks the narrow road — and drives a few miles to an Alabama fire hydrant. He meets with another truck from nearby New Hope, Ala. The two drivers make about a dozen runs back and forth, hauling about 20,000 gallons of water from the hydrant to Orme's tank.

    Between 6 and 9 every evening, the town scurries. Residents rush home from their jobs at the carpet factories outside town to turn on washing machines. Mothers start cooking supper. Fathers fill up water jugs. Kids line up to take showers.

    "You never get used to it," says Cheryl Evans, a 55-year-old who has lived in town all her life. "When you're used to having water and you ain't got it, it's strange. I can't tell you how many times I've turned on the faucet before remembering the water's been cut."

    "You have to be in a rush," she says. "At 6 p.m., I start my supper, turn on my washer, fill all my water jugs, take my shower."

    Water restrictions in Orme are nothing new. But residents say it's never been this bad.

    Even last summer, as the water supply dwindled, city leaders cut off water only at night. But in August, Reames took the most extreme step yet and restricted use to three hours a day.

    Elected in December, he has now spent $8,000 of the city's $13,000 annual budget to deal with the crisis. Most of the money went toward trucking water from Alabama.

    The town has received a $377,590 emergency grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture that Reames hopes will be Orme's salvation. A utility crew is laying a 2 1/2-mile pipe to connect Orme to the Bridgeport, Ala., water supply. The work could be finished by Thanksgiving.

    "It's not a short-term solution," Reames says. "It is THE solution."

    He says the crisis in Orme could serve as a warning to other communities to conserve water before it's too late.

    "I feel for the folks in Atlanta," he says, his gravelly voice barely rising above the sound of rushing water from the town's tank. "We can survive. We're 145 people. You've got 4.5 million people down there. What are they going to do? It's a scary thought."



    Source: The Associated Press   November 5, 2007


    Home   |   Advertising   |   News Search   |   Articles   |   Buyer's Guide   |   Career Center   |   Case Histories   |   Top of Page