Water restoration delayed after work-site injuries forced pause of main break repairs
No updated timeline yet on resumption of full service, lifting of restrictions
Fully restoring Calgary's water service will take longer than expected, but exactly how long is still undetermined.
Work to fix a feeder main break that triggered citywide water restrictions last week can now resume after two workers were injured at the site.
At around 9:45 p.m. Wednesday, a contractor was welding to install the metal collar on the new section on the pipe. While doing that, a chain broke and caused injuries.
Alberta's Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) was called in. Work was paused until the provincial agency was able to determine it's safe.
WATCH | City officials provide update on water main break:
"Keeping our employees safe is a core value of the city," said Christopher Collier, the City of Calgary's occupational health and safety director.
"There are safety protocols for returning the site to operations and this has been underway since the clearance was provided by OHS Alberta."
The site was green lit for welding activities at around 10:45 a.m. Thursday. That work was expected to resume in the afternoon.
The Bearspaw south water main, which is 11 kilometres long and as wide as two metres in parts, suffered a break on June 5 that temporarily left hundreds of homes and businesses in the city's northwest without water.
Conservation remains critical
In an update on Wednesday — a week after the main failed — officials told Calgarians they could expect water restrictions to continue into the middle of next week.
Gondek said water consumption has crept up again, this time by nine million litres, taking the city far above the safe threshold.
"I now must ask you to do more on your water conservation to support those that are working to restore our safe water supply," Gondek said Thursday.
Water supply is also lower than it has been over the past few days.
"This morning, we were at a place where we don't have enough of a cushion for emergencies," Gondek said. She said emergencies include water needed for hospitals and for firefighting.
Despite those concerns, businesses have not faced water restrictions. The mayor addressed citizens' concerns that car washes, for one, have been allowed to remain open.
"I have been briefed on the fact that many of these organizations use recycled water, and I think it's up to 85 per cent of the water that's used in car washes is recycled," she said.
"And I will say this, we are actively looking at what else we need to do in terms of putting restrictions in place. And I would say to Calgarians, do you really need to wash your car right now? There are two sides to the coin."
On Wednesday night, firefighters battled a two-alarm fire in the southwest neighbourhood of Woodbine.
Sue Henry, chief of the Calgary Emergency Management Agency (CEMA), said crews used around 100,000 litres to put out the blaze.
In comparison, she said, a fire of that size would typically require between 600,000 and 1.5 million litres of water.
"This is a great reminder for us to ensure our first responders have the water that they need to respond to public health and safety situations while we are all making this effort to conserve water," Henry said.
Mandatory Stage 4 water restrictions that were implemented when the feeder main broke last Wednesday are still in place and the city is still under a fire ban that extends to propane and gas fires.
To date, there have been 1,250 bylaw calls for water misuse and 90 calls for fire ban violations. In response, 376 written warnings were issued. As well, two tickets were handed out for water violations — both to private construction contractors. One ticket was issued related to the fire ban.
Making progress on repairs
Before the work stoppage on Wednesday night, progress had been made on fixing the broken infrastructure. A new section for the feeder main pipe was lowered into place at the site near Home Road and 16th Avenue N.W. in Montgomery.
The removed pipe was transported to another location for failure analysis. The city said it is looking at the information collected and will use that for plans going forward.
An inspection of the rest of the feeder main pipe is ongoing. More than four kilometres, or 80 per cent, is complete, according to Francois Bouchart, the director of capital priorities and investment with the city's infrastructure services department.
But it will still be a while before the city figures out exactly what led to the pipe breaking.
"I want to stress that it will take us time to determine the exact cause. We have a team of engineers analyzing and interpreting the data," Bouchart said.
"Our focus remains on the repair crew safety and our path to restoring water."