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UTV driver killed in Miller County wreck
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Fall color hikes abound in Winona area
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LCFWASA
LCFWASA pumps untreated water from just north of Lock and Dam No. 1 on the Cape Fear River in Riegelwood, all the way down to the Sweeney Water Treatment Plant, north of the Isabel Holmes bridge in Wilmington. Water travels through a 48-inch pipeline that stretches 24 miles and crosses the river twice.
Crews are working to install a second, 54-inch parallel pipeline that traverses the same path. Once online, the $37 million project will immediately increase LCFWASA’s delivery output, from 45 millions of gallons a day (mgd) the current max to an estimated 62 mgd, without additional improvements necessary. It will also provide redundancy that will protect the system against catastrophe: In 2016 during Hurricane Matthew, the pipe ruptured, losing 12.5 mgd over a two-week period.
editorial@newsandsentinel.com Interior of the new coating building at the Northwest Pipe Co. features a 40-ton dual hoist crane. (Photo Provided) The exterior of the new 26,500 square foot coating building at the Northwest Pipe Co. (Photo Provided) The first truckload of 42-inch diameter spiralweld steel pipe leaves the Northwest Pipe Co. plant for the Yadkin Regional Supply Project in North Carolina. (Photo Provided)
Interior of the new coating building at the Northwest Pipe Co. features a 40-ton dual hoist crane. (Photo Provided)
PARKERSBURG The Northwest Pipe Co. has completed a multi-million-dollar addition to its manufacturing plant at Washington, W.Va., adding increased capacity for major water infrastructure projects and improved workflow.
The Cape Fear River the Wilmington area’s primary source of drinking water has been polluted with toxic chemicals known as PFAS for at least 30 year. Traditional water-treatment systems were unable to filter out the chemicals. (Port City Daily photo / CFPUA)
WILMINGTON Make no mistake: Geoff Gisler is not pleased that Chemours recently violated a judge’s order to keep toxic chemicals out of the Cape Fear River.
Gisler, an attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center (SELC), won’t be satisfied until the substances known as PFAS including Genx are no longer escaping from the Chemours plant near Fayetteville. Compared to several years ago, when there was little being done to stop high levels of PFAS from flowing into the river, Gisler believes the recent violations are a good problem to have.
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