Keeping Water Pipes Clean And Growing Food With Kids This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, WVU professor and researcher Emily Garner looks into micro-organisms in water systems, and a children’s book on urban farming and getting kids excited about growing their own food.

On this West Virginia Morning, most of us turn on the water faucet and clean water comes out. But you may not realize the water pipes that deliver the water to you have 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. 

And, from The Allegheny Front in Pittsburgh, their latest story about a children’s book on urban farming and getting kids excited about growing their own food.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

PSC Investigating State’s Fire Hydrants

The Public Service Commission has initiated a general investigation to examine the maintenance and testing of fire hydrants. 

The Public Service Commission has initiated a general investigation to examine the maintenance and testing of fire hydrants. 

The commission has ordered that all public utility owners of fire hydrants, or that serve private fire hydrants, provide certain information to the commission by July 28.  

They want to know the number of hydrants owned or serviced, their age, descriptions of the infrastructure supporting them, problems or complaints encountered, and maintenance schedules and practices.

One of the commission’s primary charges is to require public utilities to perform in a manner designed to safeguard the interests of the public, including assuring that hydrants will perform adequately. 

The investigation comes after a fire in May that burned down a Charleston house where firefighters could not find a functioning hydrant.

In a press release, the commission said if adequate flow cannot be delivered by a particular hydrant, that hydrant is not fulfilling its purpose as part of the water distribution system and the utility owning or serving the hydrant is not providing adequate service. 

PSC Chairman Charlotte Lane said they are seeking information and will determine if further action is necessary after evaluation.

State Receives More Money For Water Infrastructure Projects

During Wednesday’s briefing, Gov. Jim Justice announced that the West Virginia Water Development Authority (WDA) recently approved more than $31 million for 17 infrastructure-related projects funded by the Economic Enhancement Grant Fund.

Millions of dollars will help communities across the state to repair and improve their water infrastructure. 

During Wednesday’s briefing, Gov. Jim Justice announced that the West Virginia Water Development Authority (WDA) recently approved more than $31 million for 17 infrastructure-related projects funded by the Economic Enhancement Grant Fund.

Justice highlighted a few of the projects, including one for Clay County to update and complete the judicial annex after the 2016 flood damaged the courthouse.

“We’ve got so many water projects in West Virginia that need real help,” he said. “Do we not deserve to have good clean drinking water? Do we not deserve to have projects and improvements that are made in West Virginia to where life is better for those folks in these communities?”

The governor also drew attention to funds for the Sistersville Healthcare Facility. The $9.4 million grant is the largest individual allotment in the group.

To date, the Water Development Authority has approved 100 projects with a total project cost of $1.1 billion and a state match of $280 million spread across 43 counties.

W.Va. Water Infrastructure Gains $80 Million In Federal EPA Funding

The money comes as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act signed into law last year by the Biden administration. It adds to the $25 million awarded earlier this year to the state’s Drinking Water and Clean Water Revolving Funds.

More than $80 million in federal funding is coming to West Virginia’s water infrastructure from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The money comes as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act signed into law last year by the Biden administration. It adds to the $25 million awarded earlier this year to the state’s Drinking Water and Clean Water Revolving Funds.

The funding is set to be sent to local water systems across the state to help with services like repairs, replacing lead service lines and getting rid of contaminants and pollution.

It’s part of a $50 billion package, which the EPA is using to help local communities’ water systems across the country.

In an email to West Virginia Public Broadcasting, Terry Fletcher of the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) said “the number of communities that receive funding from this program depends on which communities apply and complete the process.”

The WVDEP oversees the Clean Water State Revolving Fund.

A use plan document from the state’s Office of Environmental Health Services says it intends to use the current funds from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund to fund 29 statewide projects.

This also comes after the U.S. Geological Survey detected at least one kind of “forever chemical,” known as PFAS, in 67 of West Virginia’s drinking water systems. These are synthetic chemicals that don’t break down in the environment and endanger human health.

This is the first round of money to be awarded to the state’s water infrastructure in the long-term future. The federal infrastructure law is set to provide more grants to West Virginia during the next four years.

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

Federal Infrastructure Funds Remove, Sustain State’s Dams

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act brought renewed attention to the underpinnings of modern life. But improving infrastructure can mean different things even in the same state.

When the U.S. Department of the Interior announced the National Fish Passage Program in April, representatives from the agency chose Albright, West Virginia as the place to do it. Director of US Fish and Wildlife, Martha Williams, and Assistant Secretary for Fish, Parks and Wildlife Shannon Estenoz stood on the banks of the Cheat River with Friends of the Cheat Executive Director Amanda Pitzer.

“I have to say it was so exciting, an absolute whirlwind. We have been vying for funding for the project, and really just kind of waiting and unsure what was going to happen,” Pitzer said.

Friends of the Cheat has spent nearly 30 years cleaning up the Cheat River from acid mine drainage and other industrial pollution. When Friends of the Cheat was formed in the 1990s, the river would regularly register pH levels of 4. That’s just above stomach acid.

“Through the 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s and 80s even into the 90s the Cheat River was essentially dead,” Pitzer said. “In 1994 there was a large pollution event, a big blowout from the TNT coal mine, and that really woke everybody up.”

Over the years, cleanup efforts have been successful and life has returned to the river in the form of more than 40 fish species, including angler favorites like walleye. Pitzer and Friends of the Cheat have advocated for the removal of the dam at Albright as the next step in the river’s restoration since before the power station ceased operation in 2012.

“The dam at Albright is not only an impediment to recreational paddlers, but now it is imperative that we remove the dam because we have life back in this river,” Pitzer said.

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, colloquially called the bipartisan infrastructure bill, will help make that desire a reality by 2023 with a grant of $1 million.

It’s an expansive law, appropriating hundreds of billions of dollars for all kinds of projects. That means that while the Department of the Interior can give Friends of the Cheat money to remove a dam, the Federal Emergency Management Agency can spend $500 million for dam safety and maintenance elsewhere.

Dams serve multiple purposes. The National Inventory of Dams, a database of all of the nation’s major water barriers, classifies dams for hydroelectric power, navigation, flood control, and even recreation.

“The Albright dam, that’s like apples and oranges here,” said Brian Farkas, executive director of the West Virginia Conservation Agency. His organization is tasked with protecting and conserving West Virginia’s soil, water and related resources. The dams he works with were built to control flooding, and are staying firmly put for the time being.

“You have to realize the design of these dams in the watershed program,” Farkas said. “They are designed to work in unison, not individually. Each plays a role in the overall flood protection in that section of the watershed.”

In the aftermath of the 1930s Dust Bowl, the U.S. was alerted to the need to protect its topsoil from erosion and degradation. Starting in the 1940s, dams were built to control flow of local streams and rivers near farmland, and organizations like the West Virginia Conservation Agency were formed.

As was the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) within the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

“In West Virginia, you know, there’s limited space for development, and we have narrow valleys,“ said Andy Deichert, state conservation engineer for the NRCS in West Virginia. He works closely with Farkas on protecting West Virginia’s farmlands, as well as its residents.

Deichert said that dams once built to protect farmland now retain water above people’s homes.

“We do have 36 dams that we assisted with that were not designed as a high hazard potential dam,” he said. “There may have not been much downstream of that dam when it was designed and built.”

The term “high hazard potential” is a measure of impact on human life in the case of a dam’s failure, and not a measure of the dam’s quality or structural status.

“Since the 50s, until now, there has been changing criteria for dam design and construction,” Deichert said. “In the past, when some of these first dams were built, a couple of homes directly downstream of the dam wouldn’t necessarily make it high hazard. But now all it takes is one person or the threat of one person’s life to be at stake to make it high hazard.”

According to the National Inventory of Dams, there are just over 560 dams in the state. Of those, over 400 are classified as high hazard.

The NRCS and the West Virginia Conservation Agency oversee 170 dams in the state, and all of them are high hazard. With the average age of many of the dams exceeding 50 years, there is a need for the money from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, but accessing those funds is a different story.

“The bipartisan infrastructure law did nothing to change the cost share match,” Farkas said. “So in order for any of that money to flow down to the state of West Virginia, through the NRCS, to the WVCA, and then to these dams, the state of West Virginia is going to have to come up with a match.”

While the removal of the dam at Albright is far from simple, its impact is straightforward. It’s a piece of infrastructure that has outlived its purpose, collecting cooling water for a power station that no longer needs it.

The systems Farkas and Deichert are working with are complex.

“The bipartisan money is good, if we can get it,” Farkas said. “But it comes with the recognition that it’s not for free. And the state’s going to have to come up with a 35% match.”

Farkas estimates they need at least $55 million from the state of West Virginia to cover the costs but he is pragmatic.

If all goes to plan, the dam at Albright will be gone next year, but the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act isn’t going anywhere soon. Hopefully none of the state’s high hazard dams have problems before the money can be sorted out.

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