Water-use restrictions imposed because of possible water supply contamination have been lifted for some residents of Corpus Christi, Texas, city officials said Friday.
Those residents may again use the water to drink, cook, bathe and for “all regular uses,” the city said.
But restrictions are still in place in other parts of the city of 300,000 people.
In one zone, people are urged to not use the city water at all. They should use only bottled water, the city said in an advisory issued Friday.
In a second zone, residents can safely bathe and wash clothes but should not drink the water or cook with it, the advisory said. Children should not be bathed with water in the second zone because they might accidentally consume some of it.
Officials said Thursday that a chemical used in asphalt may have contaminated the city’s water supply.
A news release from the city stated the chemical is Indulin AA-86, an asphalt emulsifier. Three to 24 gallons of the chemical possibly entered the city’s water after an incident in the Corpus Christi industrial district.
The release said city officials met with the industrial district property owner and property user to gather more information.
Proprietary chemical
The city on the Gulf of Mexico sent residents an advisory late Wednesday urging them to avoid tap water in “an abundance of caution and until results can confirm water safety.”
The release said a “recent back-flow incident” in the industrial district possibly caused the contamination, but it did not name the industry. The city stated it is working with local industry, state regulators and consultants to deal with the problem.
The city is still gathering information and encountered delays because the chemical in the water is proprietary and has a patent, said city spokeswoman Kim Womack. The city had to sign a confidentiality agreement with the patent holder in order to learn the specific makeup of the chemical.
“So far, city testing has been clear,” she said. “We’re still awaiting additional results. When those results come back, we’ll notify you as soon as possible.”
Womack said the response from private and public donors had been amazing, with about 100,000 cases of water on its way.
“With that being said, none of it is in the city yet,” she said. Once the water arrives, the city will release a time for distribution to residents.
A run on bottled water
Corpus Christi advised residents to use only bottled water for normal activities including drinking, cooking, bathing and brushing teeth. The city warned that boiling, freezing, filtering or taking other actions would not make the water safe.
People reacted to the advisory on social media, with one person urging the city to provide bottled water to citizens, and another posting a photo of a bottle of water and dubbing it a “Corpus Christi shower.”
“They’re hoping to get it resolved within 24 hours,” said Zach Kastelic, who moved from Kansas City, Missouri, to Corpus Christi in September and is the partnership activation coordinator for the Corpus Christi Hooks baseball team, the Double-A affiliate of the Houston Astros. “A lot of schools and businesses are closed today,” Kastelic told CNN on Thursday.
“Many grocery stores sold out of water last night and early this morning but emergency shipments of water just arrived at some local H-E-B locations,” he added, referring to a Texas chain of grocery stores. “People (are) waiting in aisles with their grocery carts ready for them to put out the new water shipments.”
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a statement Thursday that his office was on the lookout for anyone trying to benefit financially from the situation.
“Every resource of my office will be made available to help regarding the water supply incident in Corpus Christi. We’re monitoring the situation closely. Price gouging on bottled water will not be tolerated,” the statement said.