Chetopa averted a potential crisis this week by creating a work-around after a waterline broke that transports water from the Neosho River to the city’s water treatment plant. The temporary fix, which was in place Tuesday, used a large pump to pull water from the river, deposit it in a portable pool used by firefighters to store water for fire suppression and then pump that out of the pool and into the intake pipe upstream from the break. The broken pipe was repaired by early Thursday afternoon. Scott Feagan, who is the city’s police chief and superintendent, said that the city had enough water stored in its tower to keep the system pressurized to avoid a state boil order. But the city staff still asked residents to conserve water while city crews tried to resolve the situation. Feagan said the 6-inch waterline that comes out of the well house broke. One of the city’s water treatment plant operators noticed on Monday that no water was coming into the plant and contacted Feagan. He drove to the river to look at the intake system and saw water boiling out at the river. Water is pumped uphill from the well house that sits on the river bank. The buried line comes uphill from the river at an angle and then levels out on top of the river bank at Veterans Park. The water plant is about two blocks to the west.
Source: Parsons Sun