February 8, 2002
Neighbourhood endures a
week without water
Frozen pipe leaves Brown
Row residents high and dry
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Mary-Lou Sutton-Fennell
started to make coffee on Jan. 26, stopped when her kitchen tap ran dry. A few
houses down, Cory Chegwyn was in the bathroom staring into a waterless
shower head.
Last months -40 C
cold snap froze the main water pipe supplying 15 units at Brown Row housing,
leaving 45 people without water for a week.
Water was flowing through
taps by Feb. 5, after a subsidiary feed was hooked up. But the main pipe remains
frozen.
"I would not wish
this type of misery on anyone," said Sutton-Fennell. The lack of water
was particularly troublesome, she said, because she was battling the flu.
"Its awful when
you have absolutely no water. To make matters worse, my sewer froze."
After four days at a friends
house, she and her three children returned home this week to piles of laundry,
stacks of dishes and sticky floors.
The health department intervenes
when residential water shortages pose a health risk as it did during
the citys 91-day strike last spring. However, Bruce Trotter, environmental
health officer with the GN, said the Brown Row situation did not warrant action
by his department.
"Of course there are
some health risks," he said, "but its one of those times when
you wake up and your water pipes are frozen. What do you do? You have to make
arrangements. Its one of the facts of life up here."
Brown Row receives water
from a pipe originating at Inuksuk High School. A five-person board known
as the Iqaluit Condominium Corporation oversees maintenance of the 15
units. Most Iqaluit and Apex homes receive water by utilidor or truck service.
Inuksuks pipes froze
on Jan. 26, not long before the problem hit Brown Row. The school has never
been without water, a school administrator said.
Baffin Building Supplies
has been hired to thaw and repair the pipe. But the size and location of the
blockage below the school has delayed repairs. Insurance will
likely cover the repair costs.
Chegwyn and his family
stocked up on 32-litre jugs of spring water, accepted friends offers to
do their laundry, took full advantage of their Frobisher Bay Racquet Club membership
and sent their son to swimming lessons with a full bottle of shampoo.
Despite the temporary inconvenience,
Chegwyn jokes about the return to normalcy.
"When we first got
the water back we were fascinated with flushing the toilet watching water run
from the tap," he said.
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