Prov Water Supply is Pouring Millions of Gallons Down the Drain During Drought

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Prov Water Supply is Pouring Millions of Gallons Down the Drain During Drought

Repair work has been going on since April
Rhode Island is in a drought, but that has not stopped Providence Water Supply Board running open discharge hoses at five East Side locations 24 hours a day for the past 17 days. Non-stop 24-hours a day.

Despite a small rainfall on Tuesday morning, Rhode Island is in a serious drought. Last week, the State’s Water Resources Board issued a directive to conserve water.

In an interview with the General Manager of Providence Water, Ricky Caruolo, denied that the hoses were running for weeks, “I don't know if it’s been happening for "weeks and days on end.’”

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Within hours of an interview with Caruolo, the water stopped being discharged and the hoses were removed. Follow-up questions were not responded to by Providence Water.

At the hoses across the East side of Providence the rate of flow fills a one gallon jug at the rate of 11 seconds, according to a GoLocalProv.com test at the site (see video above).

Providence Water has let run down the drain more than 115,000 gallons of water in just over two weeks at these five locations.  Providence Water has been running hoses at multiple sites since April. Millions of gallons have been discharged into city streets and the sewer system.

“I’ve been asked about a water ban, as far as we're concerned, we’re not considering one as of right now.  The [water flushing] is part of the construction process and the big picture is that we're spending millions of dollars replacing cast irons pipes,” said Caruolo. 

See video of the discharge
Presently, Providence Water is upgrading older pipes by cementing the lining. This work is being by a Massachusetts contractor.

The running discharge hoses are tied to an upgrade program, but no one at Providence Water can explain why the water has been running for such long periods and why there appears to be no monitoring..

Drought conditions:

“Impacts of the Northeastern drought were obvious in the agricultural sector, with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) rating topsoil moisture at least half short to very short on July 24 in Rhode Island (97%), Connecticut (85%), Massachusetts (80%), New Hampshire (70%), Pennsylvania (63%), and New York (54%).  Meanwhile, more than half of the pastures were rated very poor to poor in Connecticut (69%) and Rhode Island (60%). The Northeastern drought was also apparent in low streamflows, particularly across western New York, southern New England, and parts of Pennsylvania. Buffalo, New York, received 1.80 inches of rain during the first 26 days of July, 68% of normal, following its driest April-June period since 1941,” according to U.S. Drought Monitor as of July 29, 2016.


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