February 1, 2002
City looks for a few "healthy"
homes in Apex
Water-recycling project
needs to recruit 11 households
DENISE
RIDEOUT
City officials are eager
to get Apex residents to participate in a new water-recycling program that will
help conserve Iqaluits water supply and cut down on municipal costs.
City council will hold
a public meeting in Apex on Feb. 21 to try to get residents pumped about the
new program.
The innovative project
will recycle waste water and pump it back into household water tanks. The recycled
water can then be used to flush toilets and do laundry. Residents will still
get a fresh supply of water for drinking and bathing.
"This project is on
the fast track," said Matthew Hough, director of engineering for the city
of Iqaluit.
The citys water treatment
plant is working beyond its capacity, Hough said, and councillors have expressed
concern that Iqaluits rapidly growing population is taxing the water supply.
Iqaluit city council first
announced its plans for the water-recycling system, known as the Healthy House
System, in May. City officials are pushing to get the homes equipped with special
pipes and valves and get the water pumping before the end of the year. Its
one of the priorities in the citys 2002 capital budget.
According to the citys
research on the project, the benefits are enormous.
If 11 households in Apex
volunteer to be "healthy homes", the city can cut the amount of water
these homes use by half from 1,825,700 litres a year to 912,850 litres
a year.
The water-recycling program
would also reduce the number of times water trucks have to fill household water
tanks. With the new system, trucks will have to make just one water delivery
for all 11 homes, rather than 11 individual deliveries.
Fewer deliveries will save
the city about $34,000 a year in trucked water services. Residents who participate
in the program will also receive smaller water bills, Hough said.
Hough said the major task
now is getting 11 households to volunteer for the project. The homes have to
be relatively close to one another so they can all be connected by pipes to
a main pumping station.
"Weve already
had a lot of interest," Hough said. "I think the tough part will be
finding the best location in Apex for this.
The core funding for the
project comes from the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, under their Green
Funds. The organization is giving Iqaluit a $77,500 grant and a loan of equal
value. Hough estimates it will cost $325, 000 to install the system.
A smaller version of the
system is already running in one Iqaluit home. Jens Steenberg has been using
the Healthy House System in his bed-and-breakfast, Accommodations By the Sea,
for the past two years.
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