HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — A boil water notice across the City of Houston remains in place Monday night following a power outage at the East Water Purification Plant the previous evening.
“Stuff happens, whether I like it or don’t like it,” Mayor Sylvester Turner said on Monday.
According to Turner, a transformer at the water plant failed, as well as the backup transformer. Generators never kicked in.
The city has a long-standing $56 million contract with NRG Energy Services to have backup power generation equipment at the East Water Purification Plant.
“Well, we did have generators, but when the transformers failed to operate, it prevented the generators from being connected in order to provide the additional power,” Turner said.
“(We’re) working through the issues to understand exactly what the failure was to make sure we have every step in place that we make sure this doesn’t happen again,” Carol Haddock, the Houston Public Works director, said Monday evening.
Turner says a diagnostic assessment will be done to see what went wrong.
He added CenterPoint Energy did an assessment of the same plant where the transformers malfunctioned, causing this citywide boil water notice that impacted 2.3 million people.
“That there was not much more we needed to do to back up this system…that we had the transformer backing up the transformer. We had generators in place…that the system was hardened. But apparently, it was not hardened enough” Turner said.
Public works said the plant has been undergoing a more than $23 million improvement project that started in June.
CenterPoint Energy, which, through a spokesperson, told ABC13 that it’s looking into the mayor’s remarks of an assessment done by the company. The utility would get back to us.
What happens next? City officials said they are testing the water across the city, collecting samples that will be submitted to the state. They are now at a City of Houston lab and must be observed and tested.
These samples have to sit for 18 hours to see if anything grows. The hope is that there will be an all clear by 3 a.m. Tuesday. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality has authority to lift the notice.
