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To: The Street who wrote (3738)5/27/2000 11:45:00 AM
From: Jim S  Respond to of 13062
 
$21.19/gal for water? Sounds cheap to these people. This kinda makes me think that SOMETIMES Gov't intrusion might be a good thing: <g>

cnn.com

Lawsuits follow after sewage found in
Louisiana town's water taps

May 23, 2000
Web posted at: 9:25 p.m. EDT (0125 GMT)

PINEVILLE, Louisiana (CNN) --
Residents did not knowingly drink
sewage-contaminated water, but that is
what flowed from faucets in hundreds
of homes in the central Louisiana town
of Pineville for more than two months.

Some affected residents are outraged,
lawsuits are being filed and bottled water sales are on the rise.

Tap water was the color of mud at Zelma McCoy's home a couple of
months ago.

"I had stomach cramps and a couple days it put me in the bed to where
I just didn't feel like doing anything," remembers McCoy.

The water reeked at Christy Chua's house. "Whenever we'd take a
shower it really smelled," she recalled.

The women are among 350 residents of the Walden Point subdivision
who learned they drank and bathed in raw sewage for months.

Officials believe it happened because city work crews, making utility
connections to a new building, mistakenly attached a sewer line from
that building to the water main.

As a result, officials say pulverized threads of toilet paper came out of
kitchen faucets and excrement built up in water heaters. But it took
weeks for the city to discover the source of the problem.

"It was a mistake. It was a mistake, there's no doubt about that," said
Pineville Mayor Clarence Fields, noting that the water and sewer lines
are about the same size and are unmarked.

Residents were temporarily ordered to boil drinking water, and the city
replaced a number of water heaters and flushed the system.

Two lawsuits have been filed so far. However, health officials said that
despite residents' complaints, water samples show no signs of bacteria
and there have been no illnesses confirmed.

"The fact that it could happen may be disgusting, but so far there's
been no medical evidence of anybody getting sick or having any
problems because of this," said Dr. John Naponick of the Louisiana
Office of Public Health.

Meanwhile, Fields faces in his re-election campaign former Mayor Fred
Baden, who happens to be a plumber.

"It goes back to inexperience, with people not paying attention to their
job," said Baden about the tainted water episode.

Like many of her neighbors, meanwhile, the sewer flap has prompted
McCoy to start using bottled water for drinking and cooking.

"I'm just afraid right now and I know it's going to be a long time before
I trust that water again," said McCoy.

But some experts believe consumers across the country have little to
worry about in regards to their drinking water.

There are 55,000 water systems in the United States, supplying
drinking water to the nation's residents, according to the American
Water Works Association.

Most of those systems report few, if any, problems, according to the
international nonprofit scientific and educational society dedicated to
the improvement of drinking water quality.

Correspondent Charles Zewe contributed to this report.



To: The Street who wrote (3738)6/19/2000 12:56:00 PM
From: Daniel W. Koehler  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13062
 
Street

wired.com

Have you heard of Sealand? It's a micronation and the article mentions Costa Rica as a possible haven the entrepreneurs considered for an offshore server farm,

I think you'll find this interesting in the wake of the microsoft trial and the subpoena of email.

Ciao,
Daniel