Water issue 'really messes things up,' business owner says as Halifax Water boil advisory continues
A number of daycares and businesses in the Halifax area were closed Tuesday and some grocery store shelves had been cleared of bottled water due to a boil-water advisory affecting a large swath of the municipality.
The advisory followed a power outage at a water treatment facility that serves 201,000 people in the municipality. It covers Halifax, Bedford, Spryfield, Timberlea, Hammonds Plains, Beaver Bank, Middle and Lower Sackville, Windsor Junction, Herring Cove and parts of Fall River.
"Taking water out of the equation really messes things up in a lot of ways that you don't really realize," Charlotte Ashley, owner of Trident Booksellers & Cafe, told CBC News on Tuesday.
Charlotte Ashley is the owner of Trident Booksellers & Cafe in Halifax. (Shaina Luck/CBC)
Trident, located on Hollis Street in Halifax, was closed on Tuesday because of the boil advisory. Ashley said coffee is a big seller at the cafe and there's no way she can make hot drinks because her espresso machine is connected directly to the water source.
"We can't put boiled water into the machine ... which also has the foaming wand, so we can't foam milk, we can't heat up tea or hot chocolate. Water comes out of the foaming wand, so we'd be contaminating anything we'd make."
Ashley said not having water ends up costing her business about $1,000 a day.
A boil-water advisory went into effect through parts of the Halifax Regional Municipality following what Halifax Water said was an electrical issue at the JD Kline (Pockwock Lake) water treatment facility that allowed a limited amount of unchlorinated water to enter the system. (Darren Calabrese/The Canadian Press)
Halifax Water is recommending people boil their water for at least one minute if they are consuming it or using it for food preparation.
Filtering water will not suffice, it said, and water should be boiled under the following circumstances:
Drinking.
Preparing infant formula.
Making ice cubes or juices.
Washing fruits or vegetables.
Cooking.
Brushing teeth.
Any other activity requiring human consumption.
The "precautionary" advisory is meant to prevent adverse health effects from drinking unchlorinated water, Nova Scotia regional medical officer of health Dr. Monika Dutt told The Canadian Press, adding that people who are immunocompromised or infants using formula are most at risk.
Neither the Environment Department nor the city's utility have found traces of viruses or bacteria in the water, Dutt said in an interview. "No actual tests have shown that currently there is a risk to the public; however, as a precaution, they put (the advisory) in place."
The advisory, issued Monday evening, forced some child-care centres to close Tuesday.
A number of Tim Hortons locations were closed Tuesday morning. The Bedford coffee shop at Mill Cove was reopening at noon on Tuesday, but would only be serving hot drinks, not cold or iced drinks.
The Sobeys on Mumford Road in Halifax was expecting another shipment of water later Tuesday. (Brooklyn Currie/CBC)
Hospitals — including both QEII Health Sciences Centre campuses and the Cobequid Community Health Centre in Lower Sackville — told The Canadian Press they were using waterless bath products to clean patients, and urged anyone with open skin wounds to avoid showers.
Nova Scotia Health spokesperson Brendan Elliott also said "a couple of dozen" endoscopy procedures were cancelled.
Customers could be seen lining up outside Sobeys on Mumford Road early Tuesday morning. Later in the morning, the shelves were cleared of bottled water.
Jeff Myrick is a spokesperson for Halifax Water. (CBC)
Jeff Myrick, communications manager for Halifax Water, said Monday's midday outage and an internal electrical issue at the JD Kline (Pockwock Lake) water treatment facility allowed some unchlorinated water to enter the system for about 30 minutes. Initially, crews tried to flush it out of the system but when that wasn't successful they notified the public, he said.
He said that water had been screened and had gone through other cleaning processes, it just wasn't chlorinated. He said chlorination kills off leftover bacteria and bugs.
Customers of the Sobeys on Mumford Road in Halifax were greeted by a sign telling them the store was sold out of water on Tuesday morning. (Brooklyn Currie/CBC)
"So normally if we have an issue with the pump or with power surge inside the facility, the circuits will trip and then a backup generator will kick in and provide the electricity needed to run the facility," Myrick told Information Morning Nova Scotia on Tuesday.
"Unfortunately yesterday, whatever happened, we did not have a backup generator that went into place and which caused the situation we're in right now."
He said he expected it would be another 24 to 48 hours before the water was back to normal.
Systems tested frequently
Myrick said the utility is investigating what went wrong. On Tuesday afternoon he said the backup system is checked regularly and tested "at least" once a month.
"That means making sure the generator is working, but also all the switches that help trigger the generator are also working, so we're a bit baffled right now by what happened, but we're looking into it," he said.
He said the unchlorinated water will dissipate as it runs through the system, but that could take up to 48 hours, meaning the issue could not be resolved until Wednesday.
WATCH | Halifax engineer weighs in on boil-water advisory:
"As it gets into the broader network, we have to keep testing to ensure that the water chlorine levels are acceptable and that's what we're doing right now," he said.
Myrick said the advisory will not be lifted until the issue has been resolved.
Graham Gagnon, an engineer and the director of the Centre for Water Resources Studies at Dalhousie University, said Pockwock Lake is an excellent water source that has very few inputs, meaning it's far from industrial and agricultural waste. He said inputs into Pockwock Lake would be from wildlife in the forest.
Gagnon said chlorination, while important, is more like a final polishing step in water treatment.
"Some parts of our city, we have a lot of stored treated water. Here on the peninsula where we are at Dalhousie, there's a large water tank of treated water in the north end of Halifax that will probably do the most of peninsular Halifax very well, and Sackville and other places have the similar types of storage, so for those citizens in these types of area you can imagine they have a lot of stored clean water they'll be using already," he said.
A spokesperson for the municipality said water would not be distributed.
"As water can still be prepared by residents for consumption using the guidance from Halifax Water, water distribution is not being offered by the municipality at this time," Jake Fulton said in an email.
Sybil Fineberg is the owner of Hali Deli in Halifax. She said business was quiet on Tuesday and that much of the day was spent boiling water. (Mark Crosby/CBC)
Sybil Fineberg, owner of Hali Deli in Halifax, said business was very quiet on Tuesday.
Fineberg said once she got the notification alert Monday night, her first thought was getting to the restaurant and boiling lots of water so it would be on hand. She said she noticed a lot of people out buying bottles of water at the grocery store in the morning.
"We gotta be conscientious of what we're cooking. Most of the things that we are cooking, the water gets boiled first anyway. But I was more concerned about the front of the house here," Fineberg told CBC News.
Bobbi-Lynn Keating is the executive director of the Peter Green Hall Children's Centre. (Shaina Luck/CBC)
Bobbi-Lynn Keating, executive director of the Peter Green Hall Children's Centre, said her first concern was safety.
Keating said the Halifax centre looks after 120 children. She said there needs to be clean water to drink and use for washing things like bottles and produce. She said the centre's handwashing stations from the COVID-19 pandemic would be put back in use for Wednesday.
The daycare, like others impacted by the boil order on Tuesday, opted to close to prepare. Keating said staff brought in kettles from home and those with cars went on a hunt to find bottles of water.
"At the end of it all, I think there's probably 1,000 bottles of water we ended up getting so we're into it for about $650, around there. But we're set for tomorrow ... I think we're good for the next 48 hours."
Nova Scotia's Environment Department said in an email that child-care centres can open as long as they're following the boil-water advisory instructions.
"That being said, no water play or activities where water can be consumed accidentally," the department told CBC News.
Nova Scotia's Department of Community Services told CBC News in an email that it would be funding service providers that run shelters, outreach teams and other services for people experiencing homelessness to cover the "increased costs of bottled water during the advisory."
Nova Scotia's Department of Seniors and Long-Term Care told CBC News in an email that its facilities "are equipped to address situations like this and have contingency plans in place to respond."
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