Boil Water advisory in effect for South Fulton County

March 4, 2019
1 min read
Boil Water advisory in effect for South Fulton County

The Atlanta Department of Watershed Management has issued a boil water advisory out of an abundance of caution and in accordance with Georgia EPD guidance for public advisory. The Department of Watershed Management calls for immediate water restriction to critical uses only to allow system pressures to rebuild.

There has been a water main break on a 30-inch transmission main at Fairburn Road near the intersection of Cascade Road. Impacted areas that may experience low water pressure include Chattahoochee Hills, the City of South Fulton, Union City and Fairburn. In addition, Fairburn Road is closed to traffic between Cascade Road and Utoy Springs Road SW.

The boil water advisory will remain in place until the Department of Watershed Management is cleared to lift the advisory following sampling protocols.

In order to protect the public from a potential health hazard, all residents and property owners that have experienced water outages or low water pressures are advised to boil all water prior to use, or use bottled water, for drinking, cooking, preparing baby food or brushing teeth.

The water should be boiled for one minute past a rolling boil. Infants, the elderly and those with immune deficiencies should be particularly cautious. Do not drink water from public water fountains in the impacted area.

Vigorous hand washing or showers with soap and tap water should be safe for basic personal hygiene. However, if washing hands to prepare food, use boiled (then cooled) water along with handwashing soap.

The public should continue to boil their water or use bottled water until the boil water advisory is lifted. If you experienced a loss of water at your address but your address is not within the area described, the city recommends you follow these precautions.

The Department of Watershed Management will follow its flushing protocols for the system as a precaution and has sampled the affected zones to affirm that there is no contamination in the system.

The Georgia Environmental Protection Division will advise the Department of Watershed Management when the advisory can be lifted.

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