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Corpus Christi, TX - 300,000+ residents - Don't use the tap water

 
 
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 06:02 am
A dangerous chemical leaked into the water supply from a business company's pipeline. What I don't understand is Why do factories and plants have pipelines into the drinking water supply in the first place?
 
Blickers
 
  1  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 10:02 am
Corpus Christi’s tap water off limits after chemical leak. Schools, restaurants close.
By Derek Hawkins December 16 at 4:08 AM

Residents of Corpus Christi, Tex., have been warned to avoid all contact with tap water after a corrosive industrial chemical leaked into the local water system, forcing schools to close and prompting emergency bottled water deliveries throughout the Gulf Coast city.

Officials sent out an alert late Wednesday night telling the city’s 320,000 residents not to drink, bathe or prepare food with tap water after an accident in Corpus Christi’s industrial district caused an asphalt emulsifier to seep into water supplies. By Thursday night, the warning had been lifted in at least three neighborhoods but remained in effect for the majority of the city, including its commercial and residential hubs.

More than 100,000 cases of bottled water were donated to the city and were available for pickup Thursday at drive-through centers, with a restriction of one case per vehicle, Corpus Christi officials said.

“Our goal is to get us out of this as soon as absolutely possible so that our residents, our businesses, our customers can go back to their way of life,” city spokeswoman Kim Womack said in a news conference Thursday, as reported by ABC News.

Earlier, images circulated on social media showing long lines of people at grocery stores pushing shopping carts filled with bottled water. Walmart and other retail outlets said they were out of stock, multiple schools canceled classes and events, and some restaurants posted signs on their doors saying they had closed because of the advisory.

According to city officials, a “back-flow incident” at an industrial complex caused an estimated three to 24 gallons of a petroleum-based chemical known as Indulin AA-86 to enter the water supply.

The city has not publicly identified the source of the contamination, but Energy giant Valero said Thursday that it came from “third party operations in the area of Valero’s asphalt terminal,” according to the Corpus Christi Caller-Times. Initial reports indicated that it had come from Valero’s oil refinery.

“We do not believe this issue is being caused by Valero’s Corpus Christi refineries. While the City continues to investigate this issue, we do not believe the City’s water has been impacted,” Valero said in a statement to the Caller-Times. “We believe this issue is isolated to a lateral industrial line. Valero is offering its resources to assist the City in isolating the issue and to help confirm this has not impacted the City’s water supply.”

Corpus Christi city councilor Carolyn Vaughn told the paper that Ergon Asphalt and Emulsions Inc. may be responsible for the contamination.

A Corpus Christi law firm has obtained a temporary restraining order against Valero and Ergon barring them from destroying evidence related to the water contamination, the Caller-Times reported, and a second firm has filed a lawsuit against the companies alleging they “wantonly and recklessly” exposed city residents and businesses to toxic chemicals.

Representatives from Valero and Ergon did not immediately respond to requests for comment Thursday night. Valero told the Caller-Times that “while we have been named in lawsuits, we are not the source of the contamination in question,” and went on to blame Ergon. Ergon did not respond to requests for comment from the Caller-Times.

The state’s environmental regulator and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency are investigating, according to the Caller-Times.

The exact ingredients in Indulin AA-86 are not publicly available, but the chemical is considered hazardous by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. A safety sheet released by its manufacturer advises handlers to wear protective goggles and gloves when using it, saying it can cause skin and eye corrosion.

Officials said they became aware of the problem Wednesday afternoon, when they received a call from a refinery reporting an oily sheen in water from a faucet, according to the Caller-Times. Around 10:30 p.m., the city sent out a notice warning residents that “chemical substances may have contaminated our drinking water,” and saying only bottled water should be used until further notice. “Boiling, freezing, filtering, adding chlorine or other disinfectants, or letting the water stand will not make the water safe,” the notice said.

There have been no reports of illnesses or injuries so far, and tests Thursday showed no contamination outside Corpus Christi’s industrial district, the Caller-Times reported.

Some residents criticized the city for being slow to provide important details about the contamination and the response. A news conference Thursday afternoon was interrupted when a group of people began chanting, “What do we want? Clean water! When do we want it? Now,” the Associated Press reported.

“I feel there’s a lot more information that we’re not being told,” one resident, Reba Gandara, told the Caller-Times after the meeting. “We deserve transparency and [knowing] what’s going on with the water that is being provided to us. And it’s not just the water — it’s how it occurred.”

Another resident, Noe Garcia, said lines for bottled water have stretched out of stores and around the corner.

“It’s things like this that make us wonder, why do we have to pay taxes?” Garcia told ABC. “Why do we have to pay a water bill?”

Corpus Christi has experienced at least four water quality scares in the past 18 months. Between June and September 2015, the city issued two boil water advisories, one after E. coli contamination turned up in water samples and another after chlorine levels dropped in some areas. A third notice came in May 2016, when water in one area tested positive for bacteria, possibly indicating low disinfectant levels.

City councilor Rudy Garza Jr. said this week’s advisory raised questions about whether the city had taken the proper precautions to avoid contamination. He told the Caller-Times that the council would review the incident, along with the recent boil water advisories.

“The issue is that we’ve said that before,” he said, “and I’m sure people’s patience has grown very thin.”

Washington Post
Blickers
 
  1  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 10:09 am
Quote from Washington Post article:
Quote:
Corpus Christi has experienced at least four water quality scares in the past 18 months. Between June and September 2015, the city issued two boil water advisories, one after E. coli contamination turned up in water samples and another after chlorine levels dropped in some areas. A third notice came in May 2016, when water in one area tested positive for bacteria, possibly indicating low disinfectant levels.

Pretty obvious at this point that clean water is not one of Corpus Christi's municipal priorities.
dupre
 
  2  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 11:26 am
@Blickers,
I go camping at the Padre Island National Seashore and go through Corpus Christi. Once when coming back I stopped at a local gas station for a cup of coffee for the road. I didn't know they were under a water advisory. Needless to say there was no coffee. But I remember a lot of people who definitely needed a bath and the lady behind the counter yelled at me for wanting coffee and for not knowing what was going on. Was glad I could get in my car and drive out of there back to Austin. I always take my own water when I go to the beach. I'm a good campuer and always have backup supplies. Geez, I feel so sorry for them! How perfectly awful! Where I live, I have about 12 gallons on water on the shelf, even at the house, at all times. It's so important for everything. I cannot imagine what they are going through!
0 Replies
 
InfraBlue
 
  3  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 11:38 am
@Blickers,
Well hey, regulations like those that seek to ensure water quality are an obstacle to business. The new administration will remove these obstacles throughout the nation. The US will become more Texan. Yee-Haw!
Blickers
 
  1  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 11:46 am
@InfraBlue,
Sure looks that way. When you point out that people are choking on the water, prepare to be called an "environmentalist wacko tree hugger". It's the way the country is going.
0 Replies
 
dupre
 
  3  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 11:50 am
@edgarblythe,
Why aren't residents and industry on separate systems, anyway? Why can't each business that uses water for manufacturing or whatever be on their own internal system? Just wondering... I don't know much about infrastructure.
InfraBlue
 
  1  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 11:55 am
@dupre,
It would cost too much money.
0 Replies
 
Blickers
 
  3  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 12:02 pm
Quote article:
Quote:
A Corpus Christi law firm has obtained a temporary restraining order against Valero and Ergon barring them from destroying evidence related to the water contamination, the Caller-Times reported, and a second firm has filed a lawsuit against the companies alleging they “wantonly and recklessly” exposed city residents and businesses to toxic chemicals.

At least someone down there is wise to the ways of corporate coverups.
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Reply Fri 16 Dec, 2016 12:06 pm
@Blickers,
They get lots of practice.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Reply Sun 18 Dec, 2016 09:52 pm
I heard on TV the water is safe to drink, now.
dupre
 
  2  
Reply Mon 19 Dec, 2016 01:33 am
@edgarblythe,
Somehow that's not a comfort. There was another city recently that said the same thing .... ?
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Reply Mon 19 Dec, 2016 05:21 am
@dupre,
Corpus Christi has a huge complex of plants clustered around the water supply. I am not optimistic.
0 Replies
 
 

 
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