Colored water on its way any day
Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- The colored water treatment plant could begin pumping
water through the city any day now, water district officials said late
last week.
“Every day we’re testing various components,” said Diana Leach,
assistant general manager for Mesa Consolidated Water District. “Once
we’re satisfied that everything is working and that the water quality is
what it needs to be, then we’ll authorize a seven-day system test to put
the water into the system. Any day could be the day. A reasonable
expectation would be for it to begin in the next few days. We haven’t had
any serious problems but we’re just being very, very conservative.”
Two weeks ago, Mesa Consolidated Water District Operations Manager
Jerry Baldwin said the plant, the first of its kind and size in the
world, had begun its final testing.
The water district has worked for 16 years to provide treated colored
water -- high-quality underground water that starts with a “weak tea”
color and a sulfur-like smell -- to its customers.
The treatment plant will use an ozone and biofiltration process to
remove the color and smell from the water, which is found in aquifers
between 600 and 1,200 feet deep.
Originally scheduled to open in September, then October, the
completion of the plant was postponed because of design changes --
including adding a well and improving the filters -- to double the
capacity of the plant, said Baldwin and water board President Trudy
Ohlig-Hall.
The colored-water treatment facility, which initially will handle up
to 4,000 gallons per minute -- enough to meet the needs of the city --
will be capable of pumping out 8,000 gallons per minute if the district
decides to supply the treated colored water to areas outside of Costa
Mesa in the future, Baldwin said.
Mesa Consolidated’s plan to substitute treated colored water for
imported water will not lower rates immediately but should keep them
stable when surrounding districts’ water bills rise, said Lynette Round,
a Mesa Consolidated spokeswoman.
Aside from the fiscal benefits, the colored-water plant will also
protect the district from a water shortage, Ohlig-Hall said.
Leech said the district has not set a date for the opening of the
colored-water treatment plant because the opening will depend on when the
district begins getting perfect test results.
“Most likely it will be running and then we’ll say, ‘Go ahead, let the
water go,”’ she said. “There won’t be much fanfare. It’s like any piece
of equipment; it needs to be calibrated. The dosages need to be checked
by certain types of equipment. We’ve had a couple of sticky valves --
normal start-up issues you’d expect to have when doing a full-system
checkup. We want to get things exactly right.”
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