Search: Site   Web
| Print Story | E-Mail Story | Font Size
The City of Port St. Joe's new water plant, tapping the Chipola River rather than the Floridan Aquifer, opened with a few hiccups, but a pronouncement by a Florida Department of Environmental Protection official that the plant was $21 million state-of-the-art facility.

Year in News: No. 8

Water, Water

The city of Port St. Joe celebrated the opening of its new $21 million water plant, tapping into surface water, the Chipola River, rather than wells tapping the underground Floridan Aquifer.

The celebration was a bit tempered.

Construction and other delays postponed the opening of the plant for several months and during the transition from old to new plant there was controversy regarding the city’s failing to meet several testing limits on the presence of potentially dangerous chemicals, chloramines, in the drinking supply.

The outcry over chloramines was drowned out once the new plant opened and the use of a rust inhibitor, polyphosphates, to help flush the system created a problem with discolored and not particularly tasty water.

The city also came under fire from the county for the increase in water rates it was charging for residents as the city seeks to establish itself and its new plant as a regional supplier.

A FDEP official appeared before the city commission to pronounce the plant state-of-the-art, the use of a rust inhibitor and flushing part of normal operations for any water plant and the water not a “health” issue.


See archived 'Local News' stories »
 

Click to vote
Recommend this story?
Yes
No
The online vote:



Add your comments
Please follow and enforce these guidelines:
1. No flaming. Do not be hostile.
2. No comments that are obscene, vulgar, lewd, sexually-oriented, threatening, libelous, or illegal.
3. No racial slurs or insults.
4. "Remove Comment" flags offensive comment for removal.

Verification Code:
Enter Verification:
Your Name:
Your Comment:
By submitting this form, you agree to this site's terms of service




Weather
Directory
For complete
Weather Info -
click here.
ADVERTISEMENT 
Featured Events

 
  • Find an Event
ADVERTISEMENT 
powered by
google
Search
        Search: Web    Site