Calgarians trim water use as work on some repair sites going 'quicker' than expected - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:36 AM | Calgary | -11.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgarians trim water use as work on some repair sites going 'quicker' than expected

After more than a week of daily water use at or above500 million litres, the City of Calgary recorded its lowest numbers for demand on Monday at 494 million litres.

494 million litres used on Monday, down from 509 million litres

A sign that reads Water Centre is pictured.
Calgary trimmed its water use on Monday after days of demand at or above 500 million litres. The city wants to get usage below 485 million litres a day. (James Young/CBC)

After more than a week of daily water use at or above500 million litres, the City of Calgary recorded its lowest numbers for demand on Monday at 494 million litres.

The news comes as repair work on the Bearspaw feeder main, a critical piece of infrastructure that distributes the majority of Calgary's water, passed the halfway mark.

While water use was lower Monday than it has been in recent times, it was still above the threshold of 485 million litres that city officials said was sustainable.

But it's a move in the right direction.

"Thanks to those who took the extra step, or should I say, skipped that extra flush," said Francois Bouchart, the city's director of capital priorities and investment, during an update Tuesday.

"We need everyone's help to save water."

Construction work on Calgary's 16th avenue can be seen and a blue river runs alongside the road.
An aerial view shows 16th Avenue N.W. in Montgomery. Work to fix some of the sites of the feeder main pipe is going quicker than expected, according to a city official. (The City of Calgary)

Bouchart said repair work should be complete by the originally anticipated date of Sept.23.

"A number of our construction sites, we've actually been able to do the repairs quicker because they're repeating the same steps," Bouchart said.

He added that just because the work is being done more efficiently at one site doesn't mean the overalltimeline for repairs will be shorter.

Bouchart said the pipe will be back to full service once it's filled, flushed and tested a process that's expected to take two days.

Calgary remains under Stage 4 outdoorwater restrictions while work to repair the pipe is ongoing. Since restrictions were implemented, 29 tickets have been issued. The finefor each violation is $3,000.

"We are continuing to get reports of city water being used outdoors. Our bylaw teams are following up on these reports and issuing fines where warranted," Bouchart said.

There have been 1,517 complaints involving single family residences, 284 complaints involving commercial or industrial use and 130 complaints involving multi-family residences.