Friday, November 22, 2024

Calgary mayor says water restrictions could be lifted in 10 days

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City of Calgary officials now say the repair work on the city’s most critical water main is expected to be complete by the weekend, meaning water restrictions could be lifted sooner than expected.

“This new construction timeline means that you will only need to keep conserving water for about 10 more days,” said Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek during a Thursday afternoon news conference.

“We can actually see the finish line now.”

Gondek said rainy conditions could impact the backfilling and paving process, but the city is hoping to lift Stage 4 outdoor water restrictions — the most restrictive level — on Sept. 22, should work go according to plan in the coming 10 days.

She noted the 10-day timeframe is the amount of time it will require to complete repairs, backfill excavation sites and refill the pipe with water.

Work has been completed along 20 of the 21 segments of the Bearspaw south feeder main in need of repair as of Thursday.

Calgary’s general manager of infrastructure services, Michael Thompson, says the city will be expanding its water infrastructure inspections to mitigate future issues.

“We’ve increased our inspection, looking for leaks across the city. Typically, we were doing 200 kilometres a year. This year, we will inspect over 1,000 kilometres,” he said.

Thompson added this year’s inspection will cover roughly one-fifth of the city’s water infrastructure.

Water conservation still required

Calgary has been coping with various levels of outdoor water restrictions since June 5, when the city’s most crucial water main had a catastrophic failure.

Outdoor water restrictions tightened back up to Stage 4 on Aug. 26 after additional urgently needed repairs along the feeder main were identified.

Residents of Calgary and the surrounding communities that rely on its water supply — such as Airdrie, Strathmore, Chestermere and Tsuut’ina Nation — are still expected to reduce indoor water consumption until the feeder main is officially back in service.

Work on a major feeder main is ongoing on 16th Avenue N.W.

Work on a major feeder main is ongoing on 16th Avenue N.W.

Construction work to repair Calgary’s most major water feeder main is pictured along 16th Avenue N.W. (The City of Calgary)

The city says water demand needs to stay under 485 million litres per day in order to remain sustainable while the major pipe is being repaired.

Calgarians used 484 million litres of water on Wednesday, marking the second consecutive day of sustainable water use levels, but up from Tuesday’s 481 million-litre demand.

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