City: ‘We do not need’ more generators for water system, would cost $45M
"We would need six or seven generators the size of train engines at each of the two plants to fully backup our system,"
Installing and maintaining generators of that size is physically possible, but it would cost customers "about another 2% in addition to the required annual rate increases being added to your city of
Powell called a more robust backup system "something, quite frankly, we do not need."
The county estimates the cost would be much less.
"For
The Dayton Daily News Path Forward project digs into solutions for the most pressing issues facing the community, including protecting the region's drinking water that serves more than 400,000 people in
The 15-tornado outbreak on
"They should have a better backup plan for next time," said
One of their concerns is on system redundancy, the idea that the system should have enough backup infrastructure in place to keep water flowing, even if disasters strikes.
Each plant, well field and pump station have two separate electrical feeds, Powell said, so if one feed is cut, the other will keep powering the system. The two feeds are routed through separate DP&L substations.
The
"While the devastation caused by the tornadoes certainly led to a large-scale loss of power in our region, the incident revealed that any large-scale loss of power would cripple the city water plants, well fields and pumping stations because the city did not have backup power systems and generators on site," wrote
Colbert additionally said the damage done by the tornadoes "caused a dangerous mixture of broken and leaking gas lines, downed power lines and zero water pressure that would have crippled firefighting operations."
"Though our emergency operations team worked diligently to supply tankers and mobile options for fire suppression, there is no doubt that this was a dangerous and potentially deadly situation for our community," he said.
Other disasters have tested water systems in the
The 2003 blackout in the
In
The
"There's not just one redundancy in the water system, there's multiple,"
Fairchild is looking for ways to improve the city's drinking water system, but he's reluctant to do it at a cost to other services. He said he doesn't want to take money from the fire department, police, neighborhood development and other programs that impact safety.
Other water treatment plants in the region, such as
"We've worked to put a lot of investments into people and equipment and facilities to make sure that we have the ability to provide that service uninterrupted all of the time," said
___
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