July-August 2007

Mountains of Water

A community comes together to unearth the source behind the disappearance of thousands of gallons of fresh, pure, clean mountain water.

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By David C. Richardson

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Over the past few years, Ricker says, he has been quite involved with the project, “I wrote the group’s water program for meeting the DOH requirements, and I have been coordinating a lot of the effort in that regard. It has been quite an education process.”

Volunteer Effort
As with many small communities, management of Seamount’s water distribution system had customarily been performed on an ad hoc basis, using local help. Ricker says that typically “you would have had a couple of older guys going out with a shovel, and if they found a broken pipe they’d probably put some kind of patch on the line and cover it up.”

The combination of poor workmanship and aging infrastructure resulted in massive inefficiencies in the water system, which, Ricker says, the board recognized and set out to improve.

Ricker points out that much of the labor is still handled on a volunteer basis. However, the board does pay one resident, a retired lot owner who spent his early years as a handyman, to perform upkeep and maintenance on the system.

“If we have a power outage, Kenny, our handyman, is the one who goes down in the middle of the night and restarts the pumps. He keeps track of the system’s operation and has taken on the responsibility for inventory.”

Ricker says establishing the board has made it possible to bring more organization to the process.

“We set up a work order control program, as well as a cost control program on the different jobs, and we’re trying to keep our inventory under control.”

Leaks and Clues
“Electrical usage bounces around when you have a leak,” according to Ricker, who explains that fluctuations in power consumption are often the first sign of a leak. Ricker points out that because Seamount’s electric power is used exclusively to run the water pump, “if you see your power bill go up you know you’ve got a leak somewhere.”

Finding leaks became a kind of avocation for the board members and volunteers, says Zock, who provided technical assistance by joining in the search as circuit rider for the district. To find leaks in the system they installed valves to shut service off to individual branches of the service lines, enabling them to check the integrity of the piping section by section. “That’s how we found many of the leaks and brought them down.”

Rand explains, “We would go out at night and isolate sections and read them every week, looking for large increases in consumption when there was no demand.”

Ricker says the board began a program surveying all vacant lots for leaks. “If we find a leak on a vacant lot we put a corporate valve on it and shut that lot off until somebody decides to build there.”

Using a leak detector, Zock says, the team followed lines as best they could, although not all of the lines were charted. “While you can sometimes hear leaks through the ground, a leak detector works the best if you can physically touch the pipe or listen at the valve box, the hydrant, or anything like that. If we know where the main line runs, we can actually listen on top of the ground with the ground mic. If the leak is big enough you can actually hear it from the surface.”

On some of the lots the team found old valves that were rusted open, allowing water to run into the ground. In one case, they discovered a major leak where lines had been coiled up and capped leaving a valve on a 0.75-inch pipe running wide open. Next Page >

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