Southern cities hit hard by storms face new crisis: No water

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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Southern cities slammed by winter storms that left millions without power for days
have traded one crisis for another: Busted water pipes ruptured by record-low temperatures created
shortages of clean drinking water, shut down the Memphis airport on Friday and left hospitals struggling
to maintain sanitary conditions.
Texas authorities ordered 7 million people — a quarter of the population in the nation’s second-largest
state — to boil tap water before drinking it because low water pressure could have allowed bacteria to
seep into the system. A man died at an Abilene health care facility when a lack of water pressure made
medical treatment impossible.
About 260,000 homes and businesses in Tennessee’s largest county, which includes Memphis, were told to
boil water because of water main ruptures and problems at pumping stations. Restaurants that can’t do so
or don’t have bottled water were ordered to close. And water pressure problems prompted Memphis
International Airport to cancel all incoming and outgoing Friday flights.
In Jackson, Mississippi, most of the city of about 161,000 had no running water. Crews pumped water to
refill city tanks but faced a shortage of chemicals for treatment because icy roads made it difficult
for distributors to deliver them, Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba said.
She laid blame on city water pipes that are more than 100 years old, saying they were not built to handle
the freezing weather that the city was hit with as multiple storms dumped record amounts of snow across
the South.
"We are dealing with an extreme challenge with getting more water through our distribution
system," said Lumumba.
The city was providing water for flushing toilets and drinking, but residents had to pick it up, leaving
the elderly and those living on icy roads vulnerable.
Lisa Thomas said her driveway on a hill in Jackson was a sheet of ice. Her husband, who is on a
defibrillator and heart monitor, has only enough heart medication to get him through Sunday because she
hasn’t been able to go to the pharmacy.
"People are in dire need here," Thomas said.
Water woes were the latest misery for residents left without heat or electricity for days after the ice
and snow storms earlier in the week, forcing rolling blackouts from Minnesota to Texas.
Texas electrical grid operators said Friday that transmission had returned to normal for the first time
since a storm knocked out power to more than 4 million customers. Smaller outages remained, but Bill
Magness, president of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, said the grid can now provide power
throughout the entire system.
Gov. Greg Abbott ordered an investigation into the failure for state known as the U.S. energy capital.
ERCOT officials have defended their preparations and the decision to begin forced outages Monday as the
grid reached a breaking point.
The storms also left more than 330,000 from Virginia to Louisiana without power. About 70,000 in Oregon
on Friday were still enduring a weeklong outage following a massive ice and snow storm. Oregon’s
governor ordered the National Guard to go door-to-door in the hardest-hit areas to ensure residents have
enough food and water.
The extreme weather was blamed for the deaths of at least 60 people, including people struggling to get
warm and a Tennessee farmer who tried to save two calves that apparently wandered onto a frozen pond.

Federal Emergency Management Agency acting administrator Bob Fenton said teams in Texas were distributing
fuel, water, blankets and other supplies.
"What has me most worried is making sure that people stay warm," Fenton said on "CBS This
Morning."
In many areas, water pressure dropped after lines froze and because people left faucets dripping to
prevent pipes from icing, authorities said.
As of Thursday afternoon, more than 1,000 Texas public water systems and 177 of the state’s 254 counties
had reported weather-related operational disruptions, affecting more than 14 million people, according
to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.
More than 1 million gallons (3.8 million liters) of water was being trucked Friday to the Texas capital.
But Austin’s water director, Greg Maszaros, implored residents to minimize the use of home faucets
because "there’s still a lot of unknowns as we pressurize the system."
In Dallas, David Lopez said the plumbing company he works for received more than 600 calls for service
over the last week.
"It’s pretty much first come, first served," said Lopez, as he and a colleague manhandled a new
water heater out of their van on Friday. "Everyone’s got emergencies."
Houston residents probably will have to boil tap water in the fourth-largest U.S. city until Sunday or
Monday, said Mayor Sylvester Turner.
Water service was restored Friday to two Houston Methodist community hospitals, but officials were still
bringing in drinking water and some elective surgeries were canceled, spokeswoman Gale Smith said.
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis said it was forced to switch to bottled water and bagged
ice for all consumption and that staff and patients were washing with hand sanitizer and no-rinse
bathing wipes. All non-urgent surgeries were postponed.
Central Arkansas Water, which services the Little Rock area, asked customers to conserve water to help
protect its system as the ground began to warm and pipes thawed. The city of Hot Springs warned Thursday
night that its water supply was at "critically low" levels and also asked customers to
conserve.
In Little Rock, the Museum of Discovery reported that a broken pipe flooded its building — causing
extensive damage to theaters, galleries and offices and killing one display animal, a blue-tongued skink
lizard.
More than 192,000 Louisiana residents — some still struggling to recover from last August’s Hurricane
Laura — had no water service Friday, according to the the state health department. Tens of thousands
more remained under boil-water advisories, according to the health department.
Bulk and bottled water deliveries were planned Friday to the hardest-hit Louisiana areas with a focus on
hospitals, nursing homes and dialysis centers, Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said.
Edwards said he was grateful that warmer weather was in the forecast by Saturday.
"I expect that over the next several days, we will make repairs to the water systems and get things
functioning as close to normal as possible," the governor said in a live event with the Washington
Post.
In the community of Hackberry, near Lake Charles, Louisiana, Nicole Beard said her boyfriend crawled
under his house to try to fix a broken water line but couldn’t because he didn’t have the right parts
and it was too dark. She was using bottled water and sent her two daughters to another home.
"People are still just struggling over here," she said.
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Acacia Coronado is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.
Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to
report on undercovered issues.
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Associated Press journalists Andrew DeMillo in Little Rock, Arkansas;Adrian Sainz in Memphis; Rebecca
Santana in New Orleans; Gillian Flaccus in Portland; Jake Bleiberg in Dallas; Ken Miller in Oklahoma
City; Leah Willingham in Jackson, Mississippi; Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Michael
Warren in Atlanta; and Tammy Webber in Fenton, Michigan, contributed.

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