Read Durango's Top 15 list. Sad, but true.
Do something about it.
We won't give you the whole list, because YOU should read the whole post, but here are a few of our favorites.
I don't know if I can come up with 15 reasons Fort Worth is a strange city, but I will try...
1. The downtown park that celebrates Fort Worth's Heritage, and beginnings, is a boarded up, cyclone fence surrounded eyesore.
2. A billion dollars is being spent on a public works project to build a little lake, some canals, an un-needed flood diversion channel and other nonsensical things, in a Boondoggle called the Trinity River Vision that the public has not voted on.
3. The freeway exits to Fort Worth's top tourist attraction, the Fort Worth Stockyards, are un-landscaped, littered, weed infested eyesores.
9. Fort Worth is the world's experimental test tube for urban natural gas shale drilling, with more holes poked than any other city in the world.
12. Fort Worth allows Rockin' the River Happy Hour Inner Tube Floats in the Trinity River in which raw sewage is known to flow.
Instead the Fort Worth Star-Telegram has not devoted any ink to doing any investigative reporting of the Trinity River Vision Boondoggle, the nepotism that gave J.D. Granger the job of running the project, J.D.'s mother Kay's use of earmarks to get federal funds for the project that gave her son a job or any of the other questionable aspects of the TRV Boondoggle that would be questioned by the newspaper in a town with a real newspaper.
Showing posts with label raw sewage leak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label raw sewage leak. Show all posts
Monday, February 13, 2012
Monday, February 6, 2012
Smell that?
Durango shows you the mess left behind from the sanitary sewer line break at the Tandy Hills.
But, as we all know, we have more important things to worry about spending money on in Fort Worth than the water/sewer infrastructure. Or sidewalks.
The Trinity River Vision Boondoggle and its billion dollar price tag, that's the priority project for this town.
A town in dire need of having a little lake, some canals and an un-needed flood diversion channel to replace flood control levees which have worked fine for longer than half a century.
With all of Fort Worth's water main and sanitary sewer breaks I wonder if the town can lay claim to being the leakiest town in America?
But, as we all know, we have more important things to worry about spending money on in Fort Worth than the water/sewer infrastructure. Or sidewalks.
The Trinity River Vision Boondoggle and its billion dollar price tag, that's the priority project for this town.
A town in dire need of having a little lake, some canals and an un-needed flood diversion channel to replace flood control levees which have worked fine for longer than half a century.
With all of Fort Worth's water main and sanitary sewer breaks I wonder if the town can lay claim to being the leakiest town in America?
HOW old?
We've asked this question before, finally some answers.
YOU don't want to hear them, but YOU can't afford not to.
Read about the 119 year old water lines in Fort Worth. In the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Water pipelines- Age of pipe by decade
Unknown: 296.3 miles
1910: 5.3 miles
1920: 60.1 miles
1930: 25.5 miles
1940: 116.7 miles
1950: 347.5 miles
1960: 265.7 miles
1970: 298.9 miles
1980: 531.5 miles
1990: 454.5 miles
2000: 990.0 miles
Source: Fort Worth Water Department
In fiscal 2010, the most recent year for which data is available, the city had 3,511 miles of water lines and replaced about 20 miles. For wastewater, it had 3,469 miles of sewer lines and replaced about 11 miles.
That's far less than the old goals of replacing 2 percent annually, but officials said those guidelines are unrealistic with the city's rapid growth since the mid-1990s.
In fiscal 2011, $35 million in pipeline contracts were awarded, while $126 million were awarded in fiscal 2010. A number of relocation projects in 2010 were tied to work on Trinity River Vision projects and on Texas 121.
In one of the most extreme cases, the Justice Department and the Environmental Protection Agency went to federal court in August and obtained a consent decree against the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District that requires it to spend an estimated $4.7 billion over 23 years to deal with illegal sewage overflows.
"The risk of not making investment is twofold," Curtis said. "First, you spend a lot more in emergency repairs, and it's quite damaging in water and sewer breaks. And if you put off making improvements because of political or financial pressure, the costs only get higher. It is definitely a case of pay me now or pay me later."
In October, Fort Worth removed a 119-year-old valve from its North Holly water treatment plant that dated to the plant's opening in 1892. The city also inherited 7.71 miles of asbestos concrete when it annexed the Lake Country Estates area on the far west side. Gugliuzza said those pipes pose no threat to water quality as long as they are in the ground, but they could create problems if they are disturbed.
"If we had to replace it, that's when it would pose a concern," Gugliuzza said.
YOU don't want to hear them, but YOU can't afford not to.
Read about the 119 year old water lines in Fort Worth. In the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Water pipelines- Age of pipe by decade
Unknown: 296.3 miles
1910: 5.3 miles
1920: 60.1 miles
1930: 25.5 miles
1940: 116.7 miles
1950: 347.5 miles
1960: 265.7 miles
1970: 298.9 miles
1980: 531.5 miles
1990: 454.5 miles
2000: 990.0 miles
Source: Fort Worth Water Department
In fiscal 2010, the most recent year for which data is available, the city had 3,511 miles of water lines and replaced about 20 miles. For wastewater, it had 3,469 miles of sewer lines and replaced about 11 miles.
That's far less than the old goals of replacing 2 percent annually, but officials said those guidelines are unrealistic with the city's rapid growth since the mid-1990s.
In fiscal 2011, $35 million in pipeline contracts were awarded, while $126 million were awarded in fiscal 2010. A number of relocation projects in 2010 were tied to work on Trinity River Vision projects and on Texas 121.
In one of the most extreme cases, the Justice Department and the Environmental Protection Agency went to federal court in August and obtained a consent decree against the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District that requires it to spend an estimated $4.7 billion over 23 years to deal with illegal sewage overflows.
"The risk of not making investment is twofold," Curtis said. "First, you spend a lot more in emergency repairs, and it's quite damaging in water and sewer breaks. And if you put off making improvements because of political or financial pressure, the costs only get higher. It is definitely a case of pay me now or pay me later."
In October, Fort Worth removed a 119-year-old valve from its North Holly water treatment plant that dated to the plant's opening in 1892. The city also inherited 7.71 miles of asbestos concrete when it annexed the Lake Country Estates area on the far west side. Gugliuzza said those pipes pose no threat to water quality as long as they are in the ground, but they could create problems if they are disturbed.
"If we had to replace it, that's when it would pose a concern," Gugliuzza said.
Thursday, February 2, 2012
What else is in the Trinity River?
And then I saw the source of the flood.
Water shooting out of a Fort Worth Sanitary Sewer manhole.
That explained the malodorousness.
Apparently this manhole has been spewing sewer water for over a week, flowing into Tandy Creek, and then the Trinity River.
Now, it is well known that untreated sewer water flowing into the Trinity River is no big deal in this part of the planet. Come summer, many of the locals think nothing of going inner tubing in the Trinity River's untreated sewer water.
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