The City Knew About Water Risks in 2021. Those Risks Are Still Being Ignored

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Does your water taste and smell terrible? According to the City’s website and the Mayor, this is because of weather and a record cyanobacteria algae bloom last summer in the City’s Lower Artichoke Reservoir. What the website doesn’t tell you is that the City was put on notice in 2021 of many potential risks to its water supply, including algae blooms, by a report issued by an engineering firm it hired. Since then, the City has done nothing to treat the underlying problems and has merely treated the algae blooms as they arise to keep them from reaching toxic levels.  Although the record blooms this summer were kept below the level at which the City would have had to shut off our water, apparently they were significant enough to cause the current problem.

While bad taste and odor are certainly unpleasant, the 2021 report focuses on the more significant risks to the City’s water supply.  The reservoir that supplies our water is protected from the Merrimack River by a dam that is too low, which means that the Merrimack could contaminate our water supply.  That happened last year and forced officials to shut off all water to the City. Luckily, we had enough stored in the water tank to prevent interruption in water flow to residents and businesses.  The report also noted that the Lower Artichoke Reservoir is too shallow, which causes the algae blooms that could result in no water to the City, not just bad taste and smell.  As recently as last year, the Mayor’s Capital Improvement Plan did not propose breaking ground on a fix to any of these issues until sometime after 2030.

Lucky for us, the City Council was paying attention, and created an ad hoc committee to study the water issues.  After they made their report public, the Mayor finally acknowledged the issues and committed to addressing some of them (the permanent remedy for the taste and odor issues is not on the list, and the temporary one will make it harder to fix in the future). But when the City Councilor who spearheaded the ad hoc committee applied to the Mayor to be on the Water and Sewer Commission, she was rebuffed by the Mayor despite the fact that there have been openings on the Commission for months, and she is more knowledgeable about the issues than anyone outside of the Department of Public Services. 

Speaking of DPS, the Mayor has submitted to City Council his appointment of his Manager of Special Projects to lead that department. According to her LinkedIn profile, her only qualification is as a landscape architect, and from 1991-2022, that’s all she did.  She has no relevant experience for a job that will guide us toward resolution of our significant infrastructure deficits and troubleshoot the inevitable issues we are and will be encountering while we wait for a solution. 

The taste and odor issues are clearly significant, but they pale in comparison with the parade of horribles forecast in the 2021 engineering report. If the Mayor had focused his attention on the water issues when he learned of them, the City would be much closer to having them fixed by now. The Mayor’s failure to commit to permanent solutions to our water problems, fully staff the Commission, and hire a leader with qualifications beyond loyalty, makes me question his commitment to resolving the water issues going forward. 

Lauren Caverly
Newburyport resident

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Comments

6 responses to “The City Knew About Water Risks in 2021. Those Risks Are Still Being Ignored”

  1. Walt Thompson Avatar
    Walt Thompson

    One cannot spell ‘dysfunctional city administration’ without the letters in ‘nonfunctional city.’

  2. Debora D'Ambrosio Avatar
    Debora D’Ambrosio

    Wow

  3. Melanie Wold Avatar
    Melanie Wold

    I lived there from 2005 to 2014 and the water always tasted vile. When my mother visited she wouldn’t even use boiled water for tea as it tasted so bad! I had ours tested twice to be sure it was safe… (water board said it was fine). Why has it taken so long to address this?

  4. Bill Ladas Avatar
    Bill Ladas

    I have lived here for 30 years. The water has never been tasteless which would be a welcome step. Since 2012 I have been using a whole house water filter. (Paper or carbon cylinder filter that seats and seals in a clear chamber that filters from the main in my basement before it splits to our water heater and plumbing to various parts of our home).
    Replacement filters have a 3 or 6 month life depending on your filter choice. I have never made it past two months when the filter color goes from white to medium brown in color. The spouts in my sinks frequently have to be cleaned of small black grit.
    The lab report from the city stating the water is clear of various substances have a habit of always being at the limit allowed. Is this statistically possible?

  5. Could part of the Newburyport water problems be Karma? Read about the history of how Newburyport came to possess water reservoirs that are in West Newbury.

    Perhaps Newburyport needs a desalination plant like Aruba?

  6. Alan Gamble Avatar
    Alan Gamble

    I suspect that the answer to the problem and the reason it hasn’t been tackled is money….lots and lots of money. The cost of raising the level of the dam alone could easily run to tens of millions and that wouldn’t solve the problem.

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