Water Emergency Over for Now

Fairhope, Alabama 

 

 

Drilling new well #11 on CR 33
 

WELL DRILLING CONTINUES

With the end of unusually dry/hot weather conditions and return of normal mid-summer rainfall, water use should return to normal, well within the capacity of the city's system.

 From the city website: "Fairhope’s Water Department dates to 1916 when a “modern” steel water tower was installed behind the city hall (now the Fairhope Museum of History). Prior to that, from Fairhope’s founding in 1894, residents relied on a town pump located in the middle of the intersection of Fairhope Avenue and Section Street. Fairhope’s Water Department is the largest supplier of water in Baldwin County, with nearly 17,372 hookups, serving an estimated 40,000 people. The City operates five water towers with 6.6 million gallons of storage and pumps an average of 4.6 million gallons of water a day from ten wells, all drawing from a vast underground aquifer."  (Publisher: This data may not be up to date!)

The drilling of an eleventh well at the site of existing well #10 and 300 thousand gallon water tank on CR 33 in the Marlow area is continuing.

A test well is being drilled to about 200 feet and then if acceptable a production well will be installed down to 400 feet by the contractor,  Griner of Spanish Fort.

The adjacent 300K tank is actually not in use at this time, according to Water Department supervisor Langley; it is in need of routine maintenance (painting).

Well #5 (CR 32 at the airport) which had surpassed limits for manganese is now back in use with added purification measures until the new well is finished later this year, Langley said. 

Well #4 on S. Section Street was near the limit too.



Marlow well site.



Comments

Anonymous said…
Now the city needs to find a way to offset the fuel surcharge that is being passed along to citizens on their power bill.
Anonymous said…
Since Fairhope is proving water to 40,000 people & drilling a new well in Marlow might it be time for a new sewer plant down that way ?
Anonymous said…
Keep your crap in town. Nobody out here wants a sewer plant next to them.
Anonymous said…
Interesting how during this "emergency" the city continued to water their flowers while asking taxpayers to cut back. I saw the water truck watering hanging baskets and bedding plants the morning after we'd had significant rain the evening before.
Anonymous said…
I saw the sprinklers running at the roundabout at Fairhope Ave and 13 last week too
Anonymous said…
I just thought I’d say ,,,,,,,,,,, wait a minute ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, I’m thinking ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, never mind.
Anonymous said…
Can you dig it ? More water more development