Millions of Texans struggle for drinking water following deadly winter storm

  • 2/18/2021
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Millions of Texans are facing water shortages after the deadly winter storm ravaging the state caused pipes to burst and treatment plants to back up, disrupting services and contaminating supplies. Texas officials ordered seven million people – a quarter of the population of the nation’s second-largest state – to boil tap water before drinking it following days of record low temperatures that damaged infrastructure and froze pipes. Almost 600 public water systems in more than 140 counties reported disruptions in service, affecting nearly 12 million people on Wednesday night, a Texas Commission on Environmental Quality spokesperson told the Texas Tribune. Hospitals in Austin and Houston have been among those struggling with disruption to water supplies. “We are working with our supply chain to provide water for our patients, staff and hospital operations. We began supplementing our onsite water inventory last week, and supplies are continuing to arrive,” said David Huffstutler, CEO of St David’s HealthCare in Austin, in a statement. “We continue to work with the City of Austin in an effort to resolve the water outage, but they have been unsuccessful in resolving the water system issue affecting service and water pressure to our hospital.” Austin Water said its water treatment plants were stable on Wednesday, but it was still facing “significant challenges” in restoring water to customers. Angelica General, an ICU nurse for Houston’s Medical Center, told the Guardian: “The past couple of days have been pretty crazy … We had a flood. Pipes burst onto a patient. We had to move that patient. Luckily, everyone was communicative.” “I’m sure everyone is going through their own sort of hell, but we are going through it,” she added, saying her main concern was for patients needing dialysis. “When you don’t have water, how are you supposed to do that?” An employee at the Woman’s Hospital of Texas in Houston told the Guardian all hospital staff received a text message on Wednesday morning saying: “Everyone – we are on emergency water conservation effective immediately. The entire city doesn’t have water. Please do not flush toilets or proceed with any non-emergency procedures.” The employee, who wanted to remain anonymous, said he felt “added stress” upon receiving the text. “We already felt overwhelmed working in the middle of an ice storm being away from family, plus a pandemic ... and now we had to make sure we were conserving water just in case we had a worst case scenario.” The Guardian contacted Houston’s Medical Center and the Woman’s Hospital of Texas in Houston for comment. The disruption to water supplies comes after winter storms caused widespread blackouts as they wreaked havoc on the state’s power grid and utilities. Half a million people remained without power on Thursday morning. Water pressure has fallen across the state because lines have frozen, and many residents are leaving faucets dripping in hopes of preventing pipes from freezing, said Toby Baker, executive director of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Greg Abbott, the state’s governor, urged residents to shut off water to their homes, if possible, to prevent more busted pipes and preserve pressure in municipal systems. At 19 weeks pregnant, Lisa Gerow had been helping her husband gather containers of snow since they lost water early Tuesday evening at their San Antonio home. At first, it was slow-going, with only enough snow for a single toilet flush. But by Thursday, they had been able to fill about a quarter of a bathtub with melted water. “We’re like pioneer people, going outside to collect snow, you know, in the freezing cold at night,” Gerow said. But, she quickly added, “In comparison to other people, it hasn’t been too bad.” Gerow and her husband have been using bottled water to brush their teeth, wash their hands and feed their dog. They’ve got a stock of flavored sparkling water for themselves. Their last opportunity to shower was Monday night, before bed. “Honestly, I’m grateful that I’m pregnant, and that I don’t have a newborn right now, trying to keep a newborn warm,” Gerow said. “Or have, you know, water to do formula, and all the other things I don’t even know I’m gonna need yet.” Audrey Hartman, an Austin resident, believes her proximity to a hospital prevented her power from going off, but pipes in her home burst Wednesday morning. “My wife and I were in bed and we woke up and could hear water on,” Hartman said. She had been filling up every available water bottle up in preparation for this moment and considered herself lucky. “I’m pretty angry about what’s happening to other people. I’m mad at the overall Texas situation,” Hartman said. The weather has also disrupted water systems in several southern cities, including in New Orleans and Shreveport, Louisiana, where city fire trucks delivered water to several hospitals, and bottled water was being brought in for patients and staff, Shreveport television station KSLA reported. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Texans are also grappling with water damage in their homes. Nelson Garcia’s pipes burst on Tuesday, flooding almost every room in his Houston house. “I saw the ceiling gushing with water. I turned the water off but a lot of damage was done already… I counted about ten holes in the copper pipes and I wasn’t that thorough.” He tried to extract water in the house using a machine from his carpet cleaning business but the power went off before he began. Garcia, his wife, and three children are now living with a family friend, hoping that insurance will cover the costs. “I have a friend who does remodels and he said I’m easily looking at around $20,000 for repairs. I don’t have that kind of money in the bank.” Katie Liu and Carl Nunziato had been staying with friends after their Austin home lost power on Sunday night. When they went to check on the house on Wednesday, their lights suddenly flickered on as power was finally restored. Then, two pipes burst. Luckily, the flooding was under the house, and they were able to find caps for self-repairs at an open home improvement store. “Wasn’t fun, but we got it done,” Nunziato said. On Thursday, with their pantry running low after days of sharing, they stood in line outside a local grocery store, even as a fresh shower of snow cascaded around them. “Really just hoping to get anything, you know, of substance, besides noodles,” Liu said. The store was allowing customers to fill water from its taps, though they would need to boil it before drinking.

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