City crews spend 50 hours of overtime clearing wipes from wastewater pumps

The city is asking residents not to flush wipes — including the ones labeled 'flushable.'


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  • | 9:00 a.m. April 18, 2020
One of the city's clogged pipes. Image courtesy of the city pf Palm Coast
One of the city's clogged pipes. Image courtesy of the city pf Palm Coast
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by: Kimberly Norman
Public Relations Associate, city of Palm Coast

The city of Palm Coast wants to remind residents not to flush cleaning wipes, baby wipes or any other flushable wipe down the toilet. 

The city first issued a reminder on this at the end of March when nearly 150 pumps had been clogged from wipes, rags and towels. However, the weekend of April 11-12, utility crews incurred about 50 hours of overtime servicing wastewater pumps that were clogged with wipes that have been flushed. 

Utility systems are not designed to handle that material. If you must use wipes, put them in the trash, not the toilet.

The only paper designed to disintegrate quickly in water is toilet paper. Any other products including paper towels, tissue paper and especially wipes (including “flushable” wipes) don’t.

As such, these products get hung up in pump impellers and check valves, thus restricting flow. When capacity is reduced, the only fix is for technicians to go to the pump station, remove the pump from service and manually remove the material.

This occurs regularly and is part of our normal operation. However, with the onset of this pandemic, the amount of unacceptable products being flushed has increased significantly and has significantly increased the frequency of necessary pump service. Ultimately, if pumps don’t get cleared, backups could occur.

Clogged pumps can also cost taxpayers and residents money in additional maintenance costs or plumbers bills. So please only flush toilet paper and human waste.

For more information, please contact Customer Service at 386-986-2360 or through Palm Coast Connect at palmcoastconnect.com.

 

 

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