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5.5. ERMUSR 03-18-2014
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5.5. ERMUSR 03-18-2014
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StarTribune- Print Page Page 1 of 1 <br /> *StarTribune <br /> Frozen water pipes keep suburbs busy <br /> Article by Jim Adams <br /> Star Tribune f� <br /> February 17,2014-1.51 AM <br /> a . <br /> Utility workers in the Twin Cities are putting in a lot of cold hours 'y • 4:.• <br /> fixing water lines frozen or cracked by the frigid weather that has -."x x" -' <br /> gripped the area since early December <br /> More than 40 days of subzero lows have taken a toll on water <br /> systems,freezing pipes in Eagan,Bloomington,Richfield,New <br /> Hope,Plymouth and Anoka,among other cities.Public works <br /> crews have found frost piercing deep enough to freeze inch-thick <br /> service lines under streets and,in some cases,to plague much wider pipes 7 or 8 feet beneath road surfaces. <br /> On a sunny but bitter day last week,lead worker Fawn Kinsman endured minus-8 windchills as her crew spent about three <br /> hours patching a broken 8-inch-wide iron water main under East River Road in Coon Rapids. <br /> "It's been a very unusual year for frozen water lines.Kinsman said. <br /> In St.Louis Park,Utility Superintendent Jay Hall said the city has seen more service line freeze-ups than in typical winters. <br /> Hall is a leader with the Suburban Utility Superintendents Association and says its website has been humming with members <br /> seeking and offering advice on how to handle frozen lines that connect to city water mains. <br /> In Minneapolis,many homeowners have had frozen water pipes,but the city hasn't experienced an unusual number of frozen <br /> municipal pipes.That may be because city mains are large and buried 8 feet deep,said city spokesman Casper Hill. <br /> In other places,such as Bloomington,"This has been an extremely tough year,"said Utility Superintendent Bob Cockriel.He <br /> said last week that Bloomington crews had fixed 10 broken mains and dozens of frozen service lines and found frost reaching <br /> down 7 feet. <br /> "That is really,really deep,"Cockriel said,especially when most water pipes are 7 or 8 feet underground.He noted that <br /> frozen pipes are often found beneath bare streets,not under snow-covered lawns,which insulate the ground. <br /> "Traffic pounds the frost down to the pipes...and impacts water service lines,"Cockriel said.He said the cold also descends <br /> through catch basins and shallow stormwater pipes that carry frigid air below ground. <br /> Cockriel said the last time Bloomington had such frequent problems was the winter of 1977-78,when about 160 service lines <br /> froze and some water mains froze solid. <br /> Another problem <br /> Many mains in New Hope and parts of neighboring Plymouth suffer another cold-weather hazard'clay in the soil.Last week a <br /> broken 12-inch main closed Armstrong High School in Plymouth. <br /> Clay absorbs moisture and freezes solid around pipes.So when frost pushes a pipe against the clay,"it makes the pipe <br /> snap,"said Bernie Weber,New Hope utilities supervisor.He said clay is acidic,which corrodes and causes pipe bolts to fail. <br /> Weber said more than 20 water mains,from 6 to 12 inches in diameter,have cracked and been repaired since Nov.1,more <br /> than in most years. <br /> Coon Rapids crews have handled more than 30 frozen,inch-thick copper service lines so far,after none in the past two <br /> winters.said utilities operation supervisor Rick Bednar.He noted the city has advised all homeowners,especially those <br /> whose lines have frozen,to consider letting one faucet'trickle"around the clock to avoid freeze-ups for the rest of winter. <br /> Other cities,including Fridley and St.Louis Park,suggest that homeowners who have had frozen pipes take similar action. <br /> Fridley has warned residents that discolored tap water may be the first indicator of service line freeze-ups,which may be <br /> prevented by letting a faucet trickle,said Public Works Director Jim Kosluchar. <br /> "It's scary,"Bednar said.He said crews have worked almost nonstop in recent weeks.He noted he's seen frozen ground 6 to <br /> 8 feet deep that has cracked about seven water mains so far,several more than in most winters. <br /> "I expect more when the frost comes out[moving earth around pipes]after being down so deep,"he added.He said the city <br /> often teams about frozen lines from homeowners who call'when they wake up in the mornings and find out they don't have <br /> water." <br /> Jim Adams•612-673-7658 <br /> C 2014 star Tneune <br /> http://www.startribune.com/printarticle/?id=24569311 2/20/2014 <br />
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