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View Full Version : Tennessee town is out of water via drought


John Beckett
11-02-2007, 07:53 AM
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ORME, Tenn. — As twilight falls over this Tennessee town, Mayor Tony Reames drives up a dusty dirt road to the community's towering water tank and begins his nightly ritual in front of a rusty metal valve.

With a twist of the wrist, he releases the tank's meager water supply, and suddenly this sleepy town is alive with activity. Washing machines whir, kitchen sinks fill and showers run.

About three hours later, Reames will return and reverse the process, cutting off water to the town's 145 residents.

The severe drought tightening like a vise across the Southeast has threatened the water supply of cities large and small, sending politicians scrambling for solutions. But Orme, about 40 miles west of Chattanooga and 150 miles northwest of Atlanta, is a town where the worst-case scenario has already come to pass: The water has run out.

The mighty waterfall that fed the mountain hamlet (http://www.network54.com/Forum/498613/message/1194000397/TENNESSEE+town+runs+out+of+water+in+Southeast+drou ght+%21%21#) has been reduced to a trickle, and now the creek running through the center of town is dry.

Three days a week, the volunteer fire chief hops in a 1961 fire truck at 5:30 a.m. — before the school bus blocks the narrow road — and drives a few miles to an Alabama fire hydrant. He meets with another truck from nearby New Hope, Ala. The two drivers make about a dozen runs back and forth, hauling about 20,000 gallons of water from the hydrant to Orme's tank.

"I'm not God. I can't make it rain. But I'll get you the water I can get you," Reames tells residents.

Between 6 and 9 every evening, the town scurries. Residents rush home from their jobs at the carpet factories outside town to turn on washing machines. Mothers start cooking supper. Fathers fill up water jugs. Kids line up to take showers.

"You never get used to it," says Cheryl Evans, a 55-year-old who has lived in town all her life. "When you're used to having water and you ain't got it, it's strange. I can't tell you how many times I've turned on the faucet before remembering the water's been cut."

"You have to be in a rush," she says. "At 6 p.m., I start my supper, turn on my washer, fill all my water jugs, take my shower."

During its peak in the 1930s, Orme (rhymes with "storm") boasted a population of thousands, a jail, three schools and a hotel. But those boom times are long gone.

After the coal miners went on strike in the 1940s, the company shut down the mine and the town has never been the same. Not a single business is left in Orme. The only reminder of the town's glory days is an aging wooden rail depot that sits three feet above the eerily quiet streets.

Although changes are coming — cable TV arrived just a few years ago — cell phones still don't work there. The main road into town is barely wide enough for two cars to pass one another. Dogs wander the streets, farm animals can be heard all around town, and kids gather outside the one-room City Hall to ride their bikes.

"It's like walking back in time. It's Never-Never Land here," says Ernie Dawson, a 47-year-old gospel singer who grew up in Orme.

Water restrictions in Orme are nothing new. But residents say it's never been this bad.

Even last summer, as the water supply dwindled, city leaders cut off water only at night. But in August, Reames took the most extreme step yet and restricted use to three hours a day.

Elected in December, he has now spent $8,000 of the city's $13,000 annual budget to deal with the crisis. Most of the money went toward trucking water from Alabama.

He has tried to fill the gaps with modest fundraisers, but it hasn't been easy. A Halloween carnival last week cleared about $375 and a dog show two weeks ago made $300.

The town has received a $377,590 emergency grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture that Reames hopes will be Orme's salvation. A utility crew is laying a 2 1/2-mile pipe to connect Orme to the Bridgeport, Ala., water supply. The work could be finished by Thanksgiving.

"It's not a short-term solution," Reames says. "It is the solution."

He says the crisis in Orme could serve as a warning to other communities to conserve water before it's too late.

"I feel for the folks in Atlanta," he says, his gravelly voice barely rising above the sound of rushing water from the town's tank. "We can survive. We're 145 people. You've got 4.5 million people down there. What are they going to do? It's a scary thought."


http://www.foxnews.com/story/0%2C2933%2C307437%2C00.html


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a.baker
11-02-2007, 10:51 AM
Yes it is a scary thought running out of water. The sad thing is too that living here in America so many are spoiled and don't even know it or realize reality at all. Now I pray almost every day giving thank x for clean healthy water we can drink. I never thought of giving thank x for water still running. Being in this country we don't realize how fortunate we are until it's too late and than theres always that scramble to get things working or fixed again. The sad thing is, is that many times it gets so bad before we see it that it can't be fixed. People think that maybe some of us panic too much. But if you don't think and act before it happens than there are a whole lot of problems that could of been avoided. Some call it panicking (which they may view as silly) some (like me) call it getting prepared and organized. Always be prepared for the worst. That fireman sure is something huh? Bless his heart for making the trips every day to get water to the town. Now thats a hero! :yowza:

Me and my family have vacationed around that area and it is sure a very beautiful place!

CoreIssue
11-02-2007, 12:28 PM
There are too many people in Georgia now for the water supply. But they will not back off buidling, no matter how many empty spaces there are.

Building = taxes and impact fees.

Jessie
11-02-2007, 08:35 PM
a town here has that problem. keeps building and there is no water.
if I bought a house in that area without that knowledge and they knew
I'd sue them.

one time we had a bad wind storm. lost power for about 2 weeks.
and of couse we we on a pump so no water.
that was miserable! you dont realize how much you use it until you really go without it for a period of time.

could'nt wash dishes, brush you teeth, wipe down anything, wash clothes, the toilets, cook.
you name it.


I wonder what is going to happen when it just stops its going to be one big mess.
and more houses, and buildings for fees, they will have just put themselves right out of a job, and I'm sure many wont be happy with them either.

greed really shows its senselessness...

CoreIssue
11-02-2007, 11:31 PM
A lot of people losing their jobs around here due to water. Not good.

John Beckett
11-03-2007, 12:49 AM
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From not enough water to WAY TOO MUCH! Mexico is
being hammered!! Mercilessly!!

Check out this photo from myway.com ....


http://img128.imageshack.us/img128/2427/capt74a7e936e85441fba31mw7.jpg


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a.baker
11-03-2007, 02:06 AM
Those poor people and animals. That is weird to me; isn't Mexico usually dry? Things are so backwards lately huh?!

CoreIssue
11-03-2007, 12:06 PM
Man. Bring that water here. Might be enough to fill in some lakes.

John Beckett
11-03-2007, 04:09 PM
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My friend in TX said that the rain they have
gotten there is virtually unprecedented!!

And then there is this hurricane, IN NOVEMBER???
A little late in the season, isn't it??



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CoreIssue
11-03-2007, 04:14 PM
The winter is going to be a total disaster. They are saying it will be even drier than the summer around here.

a.baker
11-04-2007, 11:39 AM
A dry winter in Michigan wouldn't be too bad.

John Beckett
11-04-2007, 01:56 PM
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A dry winter here in Tennessee would be bad.

And I have yet ANOTHER problem. Major! My
wife has already turned on the heat, even when
it is like 65 degrees in here. I cannot see how
I will be able to get used to this change of climate,
considering that I last lived in Minnesota, before
that, Rhode Island, and before that, Canada.

Ugh! :(


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a.baker
11-05-2007, 12:50 AM
I am one to turn the heat on when it gets about 65 too. I lived in MI. most of my life minus one year in FL. The thermostat usually says 78 - 80; but we don't have to pay for heat because we live in an apt.