AGING PIPES UNABLE TO WEATHER THE COLD DWP WORKS TO REPAIR LEAKS, RUPTURES.Byline: RACHEL URANGA Staff Writer NORTH HOLLYWOOD -- This week's record-breaking cold wave is causing the DWP's aging infrastructure to snap with more than 200 leaks reported, including a rupture rupture, in medicine: see hernia. Thursday night that flooded a home and opened a yawning yawning a deep, involuntary inspiration with the mouth open, often accompanied by the act of stretching. Repeated yawning in the presence of other signs, may accompany signs of chronic abdominal pain or hepatic disease. crater crater, circular, bowl-shaped depression on the earth's surface. (For a discussion of lunar craters, see moon.) Simple craters are bowl-shaped with a raised outer rim. Complex craters have a raised central peak surrounded by a trough and a fractured rim. in a neighborhood street. Department of Water and Power officials said they think the cold wave that sent overnight lows plunging into the 20s froze hundreds of pipelines citywide. About 9:30 p.m. Thursday, after getting reports that water was rushing down the 12000 block of Cantara Street, crews found a rupture in a 32-inch riveted steel pipe installed in 1917 -- when engineering pioneer William Mulholland William Mulholland (September 11 1855 – July 22 1935) was a water-services engineer in Southern California, United States. He was born in Belfast, Ireland (now Northern Ireland) and emigrated to New York City in the 1870s with his brother Hugh Mulholland and traveled headed the DWP DWP Department of Work and Pensions (UK) DWP Drinking Water Program DWP Dynamic Weapon Pricing (gamin, Counter-Strike: Source) DWP Department of Water & Power DWP Drinking Water Protection . ``It was a disaster. My front yard did not look like grass -- it was a river,'' said Hina Ali, whose garage was filled with 2feet of muddy water that lapped up to the home's front steps and flooded a back kitchen. Ali's wedding dress, children's video games See video game console. , family pictures from India and other valuables were soaked. ``All night we didn't sleep,'' she said. ``We were afraid that more water was going to come in.'' Water from the ruptured pipeline opened a 40-foot-wide, 8-foot-deep hole in the middle of Cantara that had to be drained before repairs to the main could begin. The DWP has been plagued with water-main breaks in recent years as its water-delivery system ages. Experts say the ruptures will become even more commonplace unless the system is upgraded. ``More of this stuff is going to happen when we have an aging infrastructure,'' said Jiin-Jen Lee, professor of civil engineering and director of the Foundation for Cross-Connection Control and Hydraulic Research at the University of Southern California The U.S. News & World Report ranked USC 27th among all universities in the United States in its 2008 ranking of "America's Best Colleges", also designating it as one of the "most selective universities" for admitting 8,634 of the almost 34,000 who applied for freshman admission . ``Rebuilding of the infrastructure is always an urgent matter, especially when the water system in this area is potable potable /pot·a·ble/ (po´tah-b'l) fit to drink. po·ta·ble adj. Fit to drink; drinkable. potable fit to drink. water.'' The DWP maintains more than 280 miles of trunk lines and 7,200 main lines carrying water to 670,000 homes, apartments and businesses in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. . DWP estimates that about half of the trunk lines -- the larger pipes considered the work horses "Work Horses" is the second episode of the first season of The Saddle Club. Plot Trivia that carry water to the smaller main lines -- were built before 1940. Officials estimate it will take 10 years and $2.7 billion before they can replace just half of the existing trunk lines and other infrastructure. At a replacement rate of 100,000 feet per year, there is at least a five-year backlog to replace some of the systems' most corroded cor·rode v. cor·rod·ed, cor·rod·ing, cor·rodes v.tr. 1. To destroy a metal or alloy gradually, especially by oxidation or chemical action: acid corroding metal. and troublesome pipes. ``We are trying to keep on top of that as best we can,'' said Glen Singley, the DWP's director of water engineering, noting that it would take 25 years to swap out the trunk lines at the current rate. The department increased water rates by 2.75 percent and will implement an identical hike this year to pay for the costly repairs. A controversial 11percent hike imposed in 2004 was the first in more than a decade and was ferociously criticized after revelations that the DWP had spent lavishly on parties and consultants. ``This rate (increase) is paying for this enhanced infrastructure replacement program,'' DWP spokesman Joe Romalo said. ``The additional funds are being used to address these infrastructure problems that we see in California and the rest of the nation.'' But the record-breaking cold weather has exacerbated the problem. ``In my 30 years, this is something that has never happened,'' said Steven J. Malinoski, the DWP's director of water distribution. ``During the winter months, at the end of December, we have a slight increase in workload due to the cold weather, but this is something I have never seen.'' rachel.uranga(at)dailynews.com (818) 713-3741 CAPTION(S): photo Photo: (color) Armen Garibyan works to fix a trunk line that burst under Cantara Street in Sun Valley on Thursday. Evan Yee/Staff Photographer |
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