Ancient W.Va. Water lines, Worn Out Water Plants Getting Upgrades

A combination of federal, state and local funding will help improve water systems in three areas of the state.

A combination of federal, state and local funding will help improve water systems in three areas of the state.

In his Wednesday media briefing, Gov Jim Justice announced about $1.1 million in non-federal matching funds. That means work can go ahead on major water plant upgrades in Shady Spring, Alderson and the Berkeley County Public Service Water District.

The advancements include enhancing clean water capacity and fire protection, replacing aging main lines and proactive efforts to prevent future water system failures. A full breakdown on the three projects can be found here.

Justice said the state can’t pass up Congressionally Directed Spending project funds. 

“All this totals and spins into $3.75 million,” Justice said. “It’s good stuff and a lot of different areas across the state. It’s really good.”

Justice said these water system upgrades boost the state’s economic growth and enhance the quality of citizen life.

Water And Wastewater Systems Should Take Action Against Cyber Attacks 

The National Rural Water Association is encouraging water and wastewater utilities of all sizes to tighten cyber security.

The National Rural Water Association is encouraging water and wastewater utilities of all sizes to tighten cyber security.

Both water and wastewater systems are considered National Critical Functions or a lifeline and therefore a necessity to all. A security breach could cause issues ranging from economic to public health.

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (WaterISAC) is focused on the effect of large water system outages but the association warns that a cyber-attack at a smaller system can be just as damaging to the people and economy in those communities.

The agency lists 15 tips for water utilities to tighten cyber security.

WaterISAC’s 15 Cybersecurity Fundamentals for Water and Wastewater Utilities says these should be implemented by all, as long as they apply:

1. Perform Asset Inventories

2. Assess Risks

3. Minimize Control System Exposure

4. Enforce User Access Controls

5. Safeguard from Unauthorized Physical Access

6. Install Independent Cyber-Physical Safety Systems

7. Embrace Vulnerability Management

8. Create a Cybersecurity Culture

9. Develop and Enforce Cybersecurity Policies and Procedures

10. Implement Threat Detection and Monitoring

11. Plan for Incidents, Emergencies, and Disasters

12. Tackle Insider Threats

13. Secure the Supply Chain

14. Address All Smart Devices

15. Participate in Information Sharing and Collaboration Communities

Nonprofit Says Lack Of Water Access Is Costing U.S. Billions 

California based non-profit Dig Deep says there are 2.2 million people in the US who live without running water or a flush toilet in a report called “Closing the Water Access Gap in the United States.”

While the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is expected to help with water lines and systems across the country, the new law wasn’t designed to help bring running water to every American. And yes, in America, in 2022 there are some families and communities that have never had running water or frequently lose water in their homes.

California based non-profit Dig Deep says there are 2.2 million people in the US who live without running water or a flush toilet in a report called “Closing the Water Access Gap in the United States.”

What is this costing the country?

A recent study found that the financial cost goes further than the individual families and their communities.

A study released this week by the same organization called, “Draining: The Economic Impact Of America’s Hidden Water Crisis,” found that the disparities cost families, communities and the US economy $8.58 billion each year.

George McGraw, the CEO at Dig Deep says while the cost starts at an individual and household level, it ripples out, eventually reaching the national economy as a portion of the Gross Domestic Product or GDP.

How did Dig Deep get to this number? 

“When you don’t have access to water and sanitation, it impacts every part of your life,” McGraw said.

The report accounts for things like time spent collecting water instead of going to school or work. McGraw said that’s money they don’t spend in their local economy, which in turn, contributes to the larger economy.

A family in Wyoming County was the central collection point for bottled water.

“And by our estimates, they’re causing almost a billion dollars in what economists call knock-on impacts to GDP,” McGraw said. “So our gross domestic product as a country is $1 billion lower than it could be if we closed the ‘water gap.’”

The report also accounted for the money a family spends on bottled water, additional health care because of a higher incidence of waterborne illness or diabetes. Lack of access to water is the reason more than 36,000 people have diabetes.

“Families that don’t have running water at home are more likely to buy sugary beverages,” McGraw said. “[Sugary drinks] are more aggressively marketed, they may seem more valuable than water, which may be the same price. In a lot of places we work, they’re just more available, it’s easier to buy a two liter of coke, than it is to buy a two liter of water. So this results in more cases of diabetes, hypertension, heart disease and death.”

McGraw points out that complications from diabetes increase because you can’t keep yourself healthy and clean at home without water.

What’s not in the report? 

As West Virginia Public Broadcasting found in 2017, the data about some water systems is limited or non-existent.

“We know from other surveys that about 2.2 million people or more in the U.S. don’t have running water or a flush toilet. We also know that that estimate is low because the census has a hard time penetrating rural areas where most of these people live, like rural West Virginia.”

Dig Deep found other limitations in the data and considers the staggering estimated cost “conservative.” The study focused on the 1.57 million people in the US who the census identified as living in households without running water or flush toilets. The report does not include people experiencing homelessness or people who can’t afford it or have had their water shut off.

“We couldn’t quantify, for instance, the health care burden for people who drink dirty water, because they don’t have access to clean water and are facing things like arsenic or lead poisoning,” McGraw said. “We couldn’t quantify the cultural impacts that this has on local communities, or the impacts of tourism or the water industry.”

How does this happen? 

It’s not a new problem. While some communities in West Virginia are familiar with losing consistent or clean water, there are still communities in America that have never had running water or flush toilets.

The report points to the New Deal after the Great Depression when President Franklin Roosevelt created several programs to help jump start the economy. The programs built water and sanitation systems through federal investment across the country. But the investments didn’t reach every community. The majority of the communities left out were poor, rural or communities of color.

Daniel Walker
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Water tank in McDowell County before start of Elkhorn Water project.

“Since then, more communities have fallen offline because of economic shifts, or disinvestment and infrastructure,” McGraw said.

According to the Annals of the American Association of Geographers you are more likely to live without access to water if you are a person of color in the U.S. While that’s not the case in the mostly white state of West Virginia, the community on the longest boil water advisory in the state of recent has a population that’s mostly black.

In southern West Virginia, many communities were built as “coal camps” by companies. This included the infrastructure in the communities. When coal operators, people and jobs left the area, they left behind remnants like some beautiful buildings, coal tipples and water systems. The crumbling infrastructure is not reliable, which means living without consistent, clean tap water.

There are many coalfield communities that live with this challenge. Some households have gone months without tap water. That’s if they were able to get water at all.

But projects spearheaded by the McDowell County Public Service District are improving the quality of life for residents in the region. The Elkhorn Water Project started back in 2015.

It took a combination of a USDA loan and grants from USDA Rural Development in addition to the Economic Development Administration (EDA), the McDowell County Commission and McDowell County Economic Development Authority.

But all of this still wasn’t enough. Phase One and Two of the Elkhorn Water project connected a new water source and paid for new main lines and the installation but getting the lines from the public lines to the homes, came to a screeching halt in low income communities. Residents simply couldn’t afford to pay for the connection. Dig Deep helped bring the project across the finish line by hiring a local team and paying for the hookups in what’s called the Appalachian Water Project.

The town of Keystone first went on a boil water advisory in 2010. It was lifted earlier this year. The town of Northfork’s boil water advisory was also lifted after almost ten years. But there’s still more work to do in McDowell and other counties in Appalachia and across the country.

Jessica Lilly
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Water pipe where people collect water for their homes in Wyoming County.

“The reason that hasn’t been solved, I think, is because a lot of these communities are invisible to other Americans and to lawmakers,” McGraw said.

The economic impact study suggests that America should invest a lot more federal dollars to close what they call the “water gap.”

“Federal investments, since the 1970s, have fallen off a cliff,” McGraw said. “It’s just 4 percent of what it used to be in water and sanitation, which leaves these communities kind of to fend for themselves.”

A lot of the money allotted from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act is intended for things like lead line replacement.

“A lot of the families that we serve at Dig Deep still won’t benefit from those funds,” McGraw said.

There are Americans in all 50 states who don’t have water taps or toilets. Other than the Appalachian Project, Dig Deep is managing three other projects to help pay for water connections in these communities. Dig Deep says the government should help more, pointing to the “wrong pockets dimension.”

“Meaning that [Dig Deep] could create a tremendous amount of economic value by closing the water and sanitation gap by something like $200 billion over the next 50 years,” McGraw said. “But not one single investor recoups all of that, some will benefit families directly, some will benefit their communities, some will benefit the national economy. And when multiple people benefit from an investment, sometimes there’s not one party who’s incentivized enough to invest all that money. And in those circumstances, the federal government has to lead just like they did in the 30s in the 50s. In the 70s, when we built this infrastructure for the first time, they had to come in and make this commitment, and that is going to mean increased federal funding. But as this report shows, it’s well worth every dollar.”

Spending billions of dollars in low income communities? Really? 

Inflation in America hasn’t been this high for 40 years, so it might seem like a tough political pill to swallow on Capitol Hill, but McGraw says the inflation and potential recession challenges in the U.S. are the reasons why the federal government should invest in more water and wastewater.

Jessica Lilly
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WVPB
Coal mine in Keystone, W.Va.

“This economic impact study didn’t just show how much money the economy’s losing every year,” McGraw said. “It also showed how much money we stand to gain by investing in this. You know, when you have the looming specter of a recession, federal investments are important to get people working and to sort of juice the engine of the economy. And there’s really few better investments you can make on this one.”

The study calculated that for every dollar the country invests in new access to running water and flush toilets it can expect a $5 return back into the national economy.

“These investments that not only make people’s lives markedly better, and save lives — an estimated 600 lives a year are lost because of the water gap — but that actually generates an economic return that generates wealth to create prosperity in some of the most marginalized, economically marginalized parts of the country,” he said.

Federal Funds To Help Improve Local Waterways

The Biden administration has committed to investing in the nation’s infrastructure, and that includes natural infrastructure like rivers and waterways.

The Biden administration has committed to investing in the nation’s infrastructure, and that includes natural infrastructure like rivers and waterways.

The Department of the Interior announced Thursday that 40 fish passage projects will receive a total of nearly $38 million this year including projects in the mountain state.

The bipartisan infrastructure law will invest $200 million in the National Fish Passage Program over the next five years to address outdated, unsafe or obsolete dams and other barriers fragmenting our nation’s rivers and streams.

As part of the announcement, federal officials visited the Albright Power Station Dam in Preston County to discuss the dam’s removal and the positive impact it will have on neighboring communities.

Removing the obsolete dam, built in 1952 on the Cheat River, will help increase public access and recreational opportunities and improve public safety.

Engineering is underway, and removal is planned for 2023.

The state will also benefit from a Potomac Headwaters Restoration project that will remove 17 fish passage barriers across West Virginia, Maryland and Virginia.

Thursday’s announcement comes on the heels of Monday’s launch of a separate $1 billion America the Beautiful Challenge that will accelerate locally led land, water and wildlife conservation efforts across the country.

West Virginians Eye Local Bridges After Pittsburgh Collapse

Congress and President Joe Biden have committed to spending big dollars on roads and bridges. However, Biden’s recent visit to Pittsburgh to discuss the infrastructure program was punctuated by the collapse of the Fern Hollow Bridge. Since then, residents of West Virginia have been spurred to ask questions about their own bridges.

A recent analysis of National Bridge Inventory data shows that 7 percent of all bridges in the U.S. received a poor rating. West Virginia has the highest rate in the country, with more than 20 percent of the state’s bridges considered structurally deficient or in poor condition.

On January 28, the day theFern Hollow Bridge collapsed, Morgantown resident Stephanie Shepard began researching the conditions of bridges in her area.

“I’m from this area originally, I’ve been over that bridge many times. So I started to wonder if there were other bridges that were at risk in the area, or if that was the only one,” Shepard said.

Like a lot of people looking for answers in the aftermath of the collapse, Shepard heard that the Fern Hollow Bridge had been rated poor on the NBI, and she quickly searched the database for poor bridges in Monongalia County.

The database, compiled by the Federal Highway Administration, has information on all bridges and tunnels in the United States. During her research, Shepard discovered it had been created largely as a response to the collapse of the Silver Bridge in Point Pleasant, W. Va. in 1967, a key event in the Mothman legend.

Shepard found that more than one out of every six bridges in Monongalia County were rated poor, like the bridge that had collapsed in Pittsburgh.

Shepard made a map of all the bridges’ locations, and posted it to a Morgantown community page on Facebook.

“I wanted that knowledge to be available to people,” Shepard said.

Chris Schulz
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
A screenshot of the interactive map of bridges rated “poor” in Monongalia County created by Stephanie Shepard.

Shepard and others like her across the country have cause for concern, and have started asking questions about the nation’s infrastructure.

The West Virginia Department of Transportation did not respond to requests for comment, but in just the last few months, politicians have started answering.

Governor Jim Justice’s Roads to Prosperity program has identified more than 150 bridges it will be working on with the program’s projected $2.7 billion. The state is also expected to receive over $500 million for bridge repairs alone from the federal infrastructure bill over the next five years.

These planned expenditures come at a time when more attention is being placed on the nation’s aging infrastructure.

“It is not uncommon to have such distress in these bridges, especially with those bridges that have been in service 50 years plus,” said Hota GangaRao, Ph.D. He is the director of the Construction Facilities Center at West Virginia University, and has been studying and helping to build bridges in the state since 1968, almost as long as the NBI has existed.

“Believe it or not, we have about 50 percent of our bridges that have a service life of 50 years plus in the country today. So we have a major issue that needs addressing,” GangaRao said.

The National Transportation Safety Board is still investigating the causes of January’s collapse, but structural failure due to faulty bridge parts is rare in the United States. More commonly, bridges fail due to external factors such as flooding, overloading, or collisions by boats.

So while concern is warranted, and much work is needed, GangaRao says the bridges Shepard and others have identified are stable.

“Poor rating does not mean that it will collapse tomorrow or tonight, ” he said.

Age is a major factor, but more than anything is the quality of the bridge’s deck. That’s the surface of the bridge, made of concrete or asphalt, that you walk and drive over. If the deck is in good condition, GangaRao says it will protect the larger structure from the corrosive effects of road salts and other chemicals.

GangaRao points out that the Fern Hollow Bridge’s decking was almost 10 years past its planned service period.

For community members like Shepard interested in taking action to protect and improve local bridges, GangaRao suggests reporting any visible issues to the appropriate authorities.

“I’m not at all saying one should take anything into their hands. Alerting the appropriate authorities will help a great deal,” he said.

Another thing he recommends is advocating for local bridges to be washed regularly.

But that still leaves questions for Shepard.

“I have to wonder why they’re still in poor condition, and why they haven’t been repaired,” Shepard said.

One of West Virginia’s most enduring symbols is a bridge: the New River Gorge Bridge. And while that great arch might get most of the world’s attention, the more than 7,000 other bridges in the state need some attention as well.

McDowell County Food Bank Trying Out Hydro-Panels For Clean Water Needs

In McDowell County, access to clean water can be a challenge. Aging infrastructure, a shrinking tax base and lack of oversight affect the region’s water quality. That is why one community food bank is trying something different, to provide cleaner water to some who are in need.

Earlier this month, the Five Loaves and Two Fishes food bank and outreach center in Kimball debuted its new set of hydro-panels to the McDowell County community. 

They are like solar panels, but instead of using sunlight to create electricity, these hydro-panels pull moisture from the air and filter it with sunlight, to produce clean water.

According to information from developer Zero Amounts, each panel can hold up to eight gallons at a time in a mineralized reservoir. How fast the panels gather and filter water depends on how much sunlight is available, and the humidity. 

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Linda McKinney pours a sample of water from her food bank’s hydro-panels.

Altogether, food bank director Linda McKinney said her 24 panels should hold 192 gallons at full capacity. That might seem like a lot, but Five Loaves and Two Fishes provides food and other essentials to more than 800 McDowell County families each month. Bottled water is one of their most requested items. 

“There’s no way with that amount of panels that we could, you know, supplement everybody in the county with enough water,” McKinney said. 

“It is a small start, but it’s better than no water. That’s what I say about food. You know, a lot of times we don’t get the healthiest food, and I always tell people [that] in my world, some food is better than no food. You know, it keeps your stomach from growling.”

The food bank got the hydro-panels with help from a California-based nonprofit called Dig Deep, which McKinney said visited McDowell County over the summer for a water quality study it released earlier this month.

“Dig deep was here for about a week,” she recalled. “And then they went back, and I kept in contact with this lady named Nora Nelson … and then one day she said, ‘Hey, I have this great opportunity, I think that would benefit you guys.’”

Dig Deep connected McKinney with Zero Amounts and the one2one USA Foundation, which paid for the panels. 

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Linda McKinney’s husband shows a picture of a shed, from which they hope to pump water from their food bank’s new hydro-panels.

McKinney said she has not had to spend anything on the project herself. She added that she expects it to be fully operational by spring.

She and her husband were installing a shed a few feet away from the panels on Friday, where she will be able to pump water into one-and-five-gallon jugs for distribution.

Contractors still need to install pipes to connect the panels and the pump.
 

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