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Greater Cincinnati Water Works customers might pay as much as $100 million to comply with new federal rules requiring the removal of “forever chemicals” from their drinking water.
Greater Cincinnati Water Works has been urging local property owners to replace lead pipes since 2016. The federal government wants it done by 2037. About 50k people will get letters about lead pipes.
Jeff Swertfeger, superintendent of water quality treatment at Water Works, said there are 36,500 houses in the Cincinnati area with lead pipes. The utility serves 1.1 million customers in ...
However, a plaque outside the tower gives the dimensions as 151 feet tall and 111 feet in diameter. The tower was built in the Art Deco style typical of the era and other buildings in Greater Cincinnati, such as Cincinnati Union Terminal. It is owned and operated by the Greater Cincinnati Water Works (GCWW), which gives the height at 198 feet.
This includes systems in Boston (Massachusetts Water Resources Authority), Cincinnati (Greater Cincinnati Water Works), Gary (Indiana American Water), Detroit (Detroit Water and Sewerage Department), and Lansing. [53] Madison, Wisconsin removed all of its lead service pipes over an 11-year period, starting in 2001. [54]
Elsinore Arch (also known as Elsinore Tower) is a registered historic structure in Cincinnati, Ohio, listed in the National Register on March 3, 1980. The building, at Gilbert Avenue and Elsinore Place, was constructed in 1883 for the Cincinnati Water Works. [2] It's said to be inspired by the Elsinore Castle (Kronborg) featured in Hamlet. [3]
Water workers are returning to Riverside Drive in the East End with a $6.1 million solution for a damaged water main. Greater Cincinnati Water Works on Monday is set to launch a year-long project ...
Del-Co Water Company; Greater Cincinnati Water Works; Ohio American Water; Toledo Department of Public Utilities; Oklahoma. Oklahoma City Department of Utilities;