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City Burns While the Water Boils
A few years ago the City of Los Alamos New Mexico was hit by a devastating wild
fire. One of the first things affected was the electric supply to the city's water
pumping station. With no power to operate the pumps, the city was left with a
water tower as the sole means of fire protection. If the water tower was
completely full at the time the pumps shut down, there would be 200,000 gallons of
water available to fight the fire. While the fire department was busy using what
they had to fight the fire, the water department was busy trying to find
generators to get the pump station back online. Several small generators were
being daisy-chained together to try and get enough amperage to operate one of
the pumps in the station. While the fire was raging out of control, the water in the
tower was being rapidly depleted. Many of the residents were evacuating the city
while others were busy attaching make shift sprinklers to the roof of their houses.
Water pressure for garden hoses quickly changed from a luxury to a necessity.
Water availability for fire hydrants quickly became priority number one.
When the water tower is empty, millions of dollars worth of fire fighting
equipment becomes useless. Highly skilled and expensively trained fire fighters,
resort to twenty dollar shovels until the only thing left to do is run for their lives.
The irony here is that there were eight million gallons of water sitting in a ground
storage tank that could not be utilized. As fire swept though the city, it even
scorched the paint from the eight million gallon ground storage tank. This gives
new meaning to the old phrase "water, water everywhere, and not a drop to drink".
When there are millions of gallons in reservoirs or ground storage, being able to
access this water can be the difference between real fire protection and a false
sense of security offered by a water tower. Accessing water from ground storage
is as simple as, having an emergency generator. This will keep the pumps running
when the power goes off. Diesel powered fire pumps could also be used. Fire
pumps have been used dependably on things like off-shore drilling rigs, for many
years. These diesel powered fire pumps and emergency generators can give and
almost unlimited supply of water with which to fight fires. These pumps running on
an alternative fuel source can also supply regular drinking water for extended
periods of time after other natural disasters as well. When the electric grid
system has been destroyed from things like ice storms or hurricanes, emergency
pumps or generators can continue supplying water for months or years if needed,
when water towers would have been empty within hours.
Emergency generators and pumps also cost a fraction of the price of a water
tower. A diesel powered fire pump may cost $25,000.00 as compared to water
towers which can range from $300,000.00 to $3,000,000.00. Not to mention the
personal risk and high cost of insurance when building or working on water towers.
Fiscally responsible governments should see these savings as new resources.
Money saved could be put to much better use on things like schools, roads, and the
welfare of the people. Billions of dollars are being wasted each year on water
towers, when other public services are going unfunded and our deficit continues to
spiral out of control. Eliminating water towers will also make a big change in the
looks of our skylines. Mountain views and ocean front properties would no longer
have their views distorted. Cities on the plains could better enjoy sun rises and
sun sets without a water tower bulging on the horizon. In this age of technology,
pilots no longer need the name of the town on a water tower in order to navigate.
Antennas for cell phones and the like could be placed in much less expensive and
obtrusive places. Eliminating water towers would also keep our youths from being
tempted to risk their lives touting the year of their graduation or to defend the
honor of their sister.
If water systems for large communities can be effectively operated without water
towers, then smaller communities could also use this new technology to eliminate
large hydro-pneumatic tanks. Eliminating these hydro tanks could also save millions
of dollars. Smaller communities could use the money being saved for a new library
or equipment for the fire department. Elevated water storage is a technology that
was invented by the Greeks and Romans. The use of newer technology can offer a
more dependable supply of water and fire protection while saving our government
and tax payers billions of dollars in the process.
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