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Waltham Says Mistakes Made in Handling Water Quality Report

New report details water quality mistakes.

 

The Waltham Engineering Department has acknowledged that it mishandled notifiying residents about a recent water quality issue, according to a city report.

In a report by City Engineer Stephen Casazza, the city now says it could have taken more and better steps to notify Waltham residents about coliform bacteria in the city's drinking water supply. 

The report also reveals that the city drafted a public notice on Aug. 27, but disseminating it was delayed because additional water testing from the same area indicated coliform was the water. 

The report comes after City Councilors recently demanded answers on what they saw as the city mishandling the issue.

REPORT DETAILS

The report also reveals additional details of how and when the public was notifited.

In the report, Casazza writes, "that timing of public notice vs. receipt by water customers needs to be more efficient [and] that a better presentation of the situation on the city website may give water customers more information and background." The city also should have used its Reverse 911 system to inform customers, according to the report. 

A routine sampling of water taken at 126 Smith St. on Aug. 20 detected coliform bacteria and subsequent samples in the same area showed similar results, according to the report. 

As a result, the state Department of Environmental Protection on Aug. 27 notified Casazza that the city must issue a public notice on the coliform bacteria, according to the report. The DEP gave Waltham 30 days to issue the notice. 

On Sept. 11, Casazza asked the DEP for additional assistance to address the coliform issue but the DEP told him it was an "isolated" and to proceed with a water project in the Smith Street area, according to the report. According the report, the public notice was delayed because the city was unsure whether the first positive test and subsequents positives required them to send two seperate noticies, according to the report. The DEP then ordered the city to send one notice, which was was sent out through postal mail on Sept. 21 and put on the city's website, according to the report. 

CLEARING BACTERIA

After discovering the bacteria, the city began flushing hydrants, replaced the water meter and cleared sprikler lines in the Smith Street area, according to report. City officials also inspected the area for the source of the bacteria.

FOR THE FULL REPORT, CLICK ON THE PDF BOX TO THE RIGHT.

Related Topics: Waltham Water and coliform

Barry Stephens

9:22 am on Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Well, what I would like to know is when this city or any for that matter, will acknowledge the extremely adverse side effects of adding fluoride to our drinking water? Essentially every study not associated with the ADA has found fluoride to lower IQ, cause cancer and birth defects and a host of other issues. Not only that, it is proven to NOT be effective in fighting cavities which is the supposed reason they add it in the first place. I encourage everyone to do their own research and go beyond all the ADA-backed studies to real, independent research. They have nothing to gain beyond personal satisfaction by exposing the truth with this serious and alarming issue. The ADA, however, is massively invested and only gains through the continued concealment of the truth.

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jaba

9:13 pm on Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Yeah, I get it. Everyone did there job and you failed. I don't make a habit of monitoring the city's website and I didn't get a notice mailed to my home so thankfully I get "patch" alerts. Will a standard water filter eliminate this bacteria? And just in case...how do I get on a mailing and reverse 911 list?

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