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.

WVU Researcher Investigates ‘Biofilms’ In Water Pipes

For most of us, we turn on the water faucet and clean water comes out. But we may not realize the water pipes that deliver the water to our homes have a micro slime inside them.

For most of us, we turn on the water faucet and clean water comes out. But we may not realize the water pipes that deliver the water to our homes have a micro slime inside them. 

WVU professor and researcher Emily Garner has a grant from the National Science Foundation to look into micro-organisms in water systems. She spoke with News Director Eric Douglas to explain what she is finding. 

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Douglas: First off, introduce yourself and explain who you are. 

Garner: My name is Emily Garner. I’m an assistant professor in Civil and Environmental Engineering at West Virginia University. I’ve been in that position for four years and I study the role of microorganisms and engineered systems for the treatment and transport of drinking water and wastewater.

Douglas: Let’s talk for just a second about what it takes to deliver water from the treatment plant to your house.

Garner: When drinking water leaves the treatment plant, it still has a really long journey to travel before it arrives at your home or the businesses in your community. It can take days or even weeks for the water to make that journey. It’s one of the biggest jobs that our water utilities have – is making sure that that water stays high quality and safe for people to drink from the time it leaves the treatment plant to the time when it arrives at people’s homes. Even a relatively small community might have hundreds of miles of pipe that are buried underground.

Douglas: That’s, that’s actually kind of stunning. I would never have thought it would be in the system that long. Is it going to a holding tank somewhere?

Garner: Certainly tanks are really prevalent throughout distribution systems, especially in West Virginia, where we’ve got a lot of hills. They can help us overcome some of the elevation differences that might exist throughout a community. Those things are also really important for holding water so the treatment plant can treat the same amount of water throughout the day and night and not need to kind of adjust to the fact that everyone wakes up at 6am and takes a shower. But water doesn’t usually sit in those tanks for days or weeks at a time. It’s just that when water has to travel through hundreds of miles of pipe, it can take a really long time. That time just starts to add up.

Douglas: Explain to me what biofilms are within the water distribution system.

Garner: It’s very normal in any aquatic environment. If you’ve gone down to the river or the stream, you might see kind of a film that forms on the surface of rocks. That’s exactly what we’re talking about in drinking water. But of course, the water is much cleaner. When that water leaves the treatment plant, the utility has dosed some sort of chlorine disinfectant to kill harmful microorganisms. But there’s lots of research out there that shows that there still might be some microorganisms present in that water. Most of those are going to be harmless, they’re not going to make people sick but as that water flows over the surface of pipes continuously, it can lead to formation of those biofilms. 

We care about those for a number of different reasons. When they accumulate in great enough quantities, they can affect water quality in different ways like compounds that affect taste and odor. They could slough off into the water and lead to discoloration events. Really importantly, they can also create environments where harmful bacteria do get into the system. While these biofilms are totally normal, in small quantities, it is really important to have strategies to control them and to make sure they don’t get out of hand and start to accumulate in ways that can affect water quality. 

Douglas: You’re not talking like big green slimy build up inside of a water pipe. This is a microscopic level, typically.

Garner: We’re talking about these really, really thin biofilms. But when they accumulate on the inside of many, many miles of pipe, it can still be something that can affect water quality.

Douglas: In West Virginia, especially in the rural areas, some of the smaller communities, there’s some aging infrastructure, there’s aging water systems. So what do we do about some of that? Is that a growing problem? 

Garner: Certainly our infrastructure is aging across the country, but certainly in a lot of parts of West Virginia. I think it’s important to be really concerned about the state of that buried infrastructure that we can’t see that was maybe put in the ground 50, 60 plus years ago. And so that’s absolutely an important thing to be concerned with, and making sure that we can minimize some of these impacts to water quality. 

Douglas: Is chlorine what we’re using and it just works best beyond anything? 

Garner: It’s a balancing act. Chlorine is really, really important. You know, it wasn’t much more than 100 years ago that we had diseases like cholera that were affecting huge swaths of the population because we weren’t able to disinfect our water before we drank it. So chlorine is absolutely essential, making sure we can disinfect that water is absolutely essential. 

But today, we do know that it can react with other compounds in water, like organic matter, to create compounds known as disinfection byproducts. A lot of these disinfection byproducts are possible carcinogens. And so we certainly want to minimize how prevalent those are in our water. It’s a really big balancing act for water utilities to deal with: how do they make sure there’s enough chlorine present in our water to kill microorganisms, while making sure that they don’t contribute to the propagation of these disinfection byproducts? And that’s one of the reasons we really care about control of biofilms. Because organic matter can accumulate in those biofilms — microorganisms are organic, they create organic compounds, to help them kind of stick to the walls of the pipe. And so controlling biofilms are also important to help make that balancing act a little bit easier.

Douglas: One of the big issues facing the water community is people who can work in these systems, who have a lot of these water facilities, are aging out or they’re retiring. Talk to me a little bit about what you’re doing to help get people who can work in the water systems?

Garner: This grant from the National Science Foundation that is supporting a lot of my work, it has two major goals. One is research, and the other is education. That education includes things like, I plan to work with a lot of undergraduate and graduate students so they will come out of this better trained to engineer good systems, designing good systems that can address some of these challenges that we’re talking about. 

But the other part of my education component associated with this grant is through K through 12 outreach. My goal is to help K through 12 students better understand what opportunities they might have for careers in the water sector. I want them to, you know, decide whether or not they want to pursue careers in that field, how important water workers in our state are for the health of our communities.

Douglas: What haven’t we talked about?

Garner: I did want to mention that for this National Science Foundation project, one of our main goals for this research is to better integrate our understanding of the microbiology of drinking water systems with modeling of flow patterns present in drinking water distribution systems. With lots of other aquatic environments, we know that the forces that are exerted by flowing water can impact how biofilms grow, but we don’t really have a thorough understanding of how flow impacts what happens to microorganisms in drinking water distribution systems. And part of why this is so important, and interesting to my research team, is that one of our key hypotheses driving this research is that we think these conditions will be very different in rural areas where it can take many, many miles of pipe to reach even a relatively few number of homes in a small community compared to much more densely populated urban areas where we’ve got a lot more data on this subject. 

That’s what one of our goals is, to better understand what some of the challenges that might exist to integrating flow modeling of distribution systems with understanding microbiology especially in rural communities.

Hardy County, Town Of Romney To Get Water Facility Upgrades

Funding totalling $2,710,000 is going to both Hardy County and the Eastern Panhandle town of Romney as part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development Grant Program.

Funding totaling $2,710,000 is going to both Hardy County and the Eastern Panhandle town of Romney as part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Rural Development Grant Program.

The program is part of a commitment by the USDA to “improve the economy and quality of life in rural America,” according to the agency’s website. 

“The funding from the USDA will help more West Virginians reliably access clean water and make distribution more efficient for all residents,” U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., said in a release.

Money for Romney will help upgrade the town’s water distribution lines and treatment facilities. The funds are being awarded as a combination of loan and grant funding, with $1,554,000 being loaned alongside an extra $850,000 in grant money to help.

Hardy County’s Public Service District is also receiving a $291,000 grant to help construct new water and waste disposal facilities in Moorefield. Flooding in June of 2018 damaged the county’s water lines as well as the district’s office building. 

The grant will help construct a new office building for the agency at the Robert C. Byrd-Hardy County Industrial Park, including a garage for maintenance and storage of parts, vehicles and equipment. 

The construction project previously received $1,460,000 in loan funding, according to a release from the USDA.

The USDA previously announced another $10 million to help improve water safety in the state last December.

Volunteers Needed To Help With Annual Kanawha River Cleanup

The beautification project is part of the 32nd annual Great Kanawha River Cleanup and the Make It Shine program.

An annual clean up along the Kanawha River is about two and half weeks away.

Organizers are looking for volunteers in three counties.

The beautification project is part of the 32nd annual Great Kanawha River Cleanup and the Make It Shine program.

The river runs from Gauley Bridge to the Ohio River at Point Pleasant. Clean up will be in Fayette, Putnam and Kanawha counties. Volunteers can register with the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection.

Volunteers will receive a t-shirt and the WVDEP Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan (REAP) will haul away the garbage and supply participants with bags and gloves. The clean up is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 10.

Find more information about how to register, volunteer or suggest a cleanup location, contact Make It Shine coordinator Chris Cartwright at christopher.j.cartwright@wv.gov or at 1-800-322-5530.

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.
 

Ohio Valley Residents Among Millions In America Lacking Access To Clean Water, Sanitation

Communities across the Ohio Valley are among an estimated 2 million Americans that do not have consistent access to clean drinking water and basic indoor plumbing, according to a report published Monday by two nonprofits, DigDeep and the US Water Alliance.

 

The report titled, “Closing the Water Access Gap in the United States,” synthesized data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau, including its American Community Survey, to identify six areas of the country where access to clean water is lagging. That includes some communities in Appalachia, which the report lists among six “hot spots” for inadequate water access. 

“From all the data sources we looked at, we know at least 2 million people in the U.S. don’t have access to running water or a working flush toilet,” said George McGraw, founder of DigDeep. “But we also know because of some errors with the census that the number is probably much higher than that.”

The analysis finds people of color, low-income individuals living in rural areas, tribal communities, and immigrants are more likely to go without running water and basic indoor plumbing. Native Americans are 19 times more likely than any other group to have trouble accessing clean water. 

The report states there are multiple reasons why some communities find themselves lacking access to clean water. One is a steep decline in federal funding for water infrastructure. Historical discrimination has also played a role. 

In the 1980s, the federal government started placing more emphasis on loans over grants for water infrastructure. As a result, federal funding for water and wastewater systems has dropped from 63 percent in 1977 to less than 9 percent today. 

Nationwide, the report finds the number of Americans without access to complete plumbing has declined. Between 2000 and 2014, those without water access dropped from 1.6 million to 1.4 million. However, the rate of decline has fallen in recent decades. For example, between 1950 and 1970 the percentage of the population lacking complete plumbing dropped from 27 percent to 5.9 percent.

“This suggests that the remaining communities lacking access face particularly entrenched challenges,” the report states. 

Further analysis of state-level data by researchers at Michigan State University showed that while states made improvements, others including, Delaware, Idaho, Kansas, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota, and Puerto Rico, saw the number of people without access to clean water grow. 

“We’re worried in those places fewer people might have access to a working tap or toilet tomorrow than they do today,” McGraw said. “That’s a very alarming trend in a country that is as prosperous and has been as successful as we in extending services to all.”

West Virginia

In McDowell County, West Virginia, for example, the authors highlight three communities where crumbling infrastructure and population loss are creating a perfect storm. 

In the town of Keystone, for example, the water system was constructed decades ago by coal companies that no longer exist. Today, the community, which stopped funding its police department in 2018, does not have the tax base to repair the leaking pipes. 

In the nearby community of Mile Branch, many residents are not connected to any type of water system. Instead, some collect water from streams or other natural sources. 

But the springs and wells many people used to gather drinking water may not be safe either. 

When households are not connected to sewer systems or septic systems, waste is sometimes piped straight into nearby streams. The practice, also known as straight piping, can contaminate water used for drinking and cause health problems including staph infections and gastrointestinal issues. Water sampling from 2012-2014 in southeastern Kentucky found as many as 64 percent of the sites exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency threshold for E. coli bacteria. 

Despite the region’s challenges, the report’s authors also highlight solutions across Appalachia that boost access to clean water. 

For example, in McDowell County, the authors profiled the Five Loaves & Two Fishes food bank, which has become the de facto source of bottled water across the county. As a trusted organization within the community, the food bank is able to not only deliver drinking water, but check in with elderly and other vulnerable residents. 

In southeastern Kentucky, the faith-based organization Red Bird Mission has installed a water filling station. The authors note that some residents fill up at night to avoid being seen, “an indication that life without water access still carries a stigma.”

Radhika Fox, CEO of the US Water Alliance, said the prolonged failure to provide water and sanitation access in Appalachia is, in part, a question of the country’s priorities. She said while for most communities local taxes can fund maintenance and service, in impoverished, rural communities that may not be the case. 

“We need to honor communities that live in rural America,” Fox said. “And when maybe the math might not always pencil out, we need to figure out how we utilize public investment to build that water safety net for those communities as well.”

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