DENVER, March 21, 2008

Town's Water Gets Rare Case Of Salmonella

Alamosa, Colorado Tap Water System Must Be Disinfected After 138 People Fall Ill

  • A petri dish containing salmonella culture.

    A petri dish containing salmonella culture.  (AP)

(AP)  It could be three more weeks before residents of a southern Colorado town can drink water straight from the tap after dozens of cases of salmonella poisoning were linked to municipal water, putting seven people in the hospital.

An analysis indicates the municipal water system in Alamosa is the source of the bacterial outbreak, as suspected, said Ned Calonge, chief medical officer for the state health department.

Gov. Bill Ritter declared an emergency Friday in Alamosa County, activating the National Guard and providing as much as $300,000 for response efforts.

The city and county have also declared emergencies as officials scrambled to provide safe water and disinfect the system with chlorine.

The earliest the city water system could be flushed is Tuesday, and disinfecting it and making sure it is safe could take many days, said James Martin, executive director of the state health department. Water agencies from Denver, Aurora and Fort Collins were helping.

As of Friday, 138 cases of salmonella linked to the outbreak had been reported in people from infancy to age 89, of which 47 were confirmed by lab testing, Calonge said. The conditions of those hospitalized weren't released.

Alamosa, with about 8,500 residents, gets its water from a deep well system. The water is pure from the aquifer and is not chlorinated.

Investigators are seeking how the system was contaminated. Possibilities include a compromise in a storage tank or cross-contamination with a sewage line, Calonge said.

About 45 businesses are providing enough bottled water to supply residents for several days, in some cases for free, said Hans Kallam, director of the state Division of Emergency Management. Bulk water is also available from East Alamosa, which is not connected to the city system.

Boiling tap water will kill bacteria, but health officials warned that no one should use even boiled tap water once the flushing of the water system begins. People were warned not to give pets tap water, either.

San Luis Valley Regional Medical Center bought in bottled water, and equipment was being sanitized with alcohol, said Chief Operating Officer Henry Garvin.

"It's becoming much more costly to deliver care, but for patient care it's not going to be an issue," Garvin said, who did not have an estimate on the extra costs.

The city had been working to switch to a chlorinated system, but the outbreak is speeding up the timetable, Calonge said.

Only 15 salmonella outbreaks from public water systems were reported from 1971 to 2004, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.

Symptoms include diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps that usually go away within a week, although same cases may require hospitalization.


© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by greeneyes222 March 24, 2008 11:17 AM EDT
"The earliest the city water system could be flushed is Tuesday"

Why? Because of the holiday? Yes it would be a pain to have to do it sooner, but public safety is involved. Guess the good people of Alamosa now know what the city''s priorities are.
Reply to this comment
by cyberus-2009 March 22, 2008 10:28 PM EDT
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WHY DON''''T YOU TEACH YOUR PEOPLE ABOUT USING CLOROX BLEACH TO PURIFY THE WATER?
SEEMS LIKE A LOTS OF PANIC THERE!
RIDICULOUS!

Posted by prairiefox1 at 04:16 PM : Mar 22, 2008
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Shhhh .. if the citizens know how easy it is they might wonder why some city officials brother-in-law is going to be paid $2.5 million to install $150,000 worth of chlorination equipment
Reply to this comment
by tucano2 March 22, 2008 7:41 PM EDT
Get rid of the Illegal Alien food handlers and the problem will disappear.
Reply to this comment
by prairiefox1 March 22, 2008 7:16 PM EDT
WHY DON''T YOU TEACH YOUR PEOPLE ABOUT USING CLOROX BLEACH TO PURIFY THE WATER?
SEEMS LIKE A LOTS OF PANIC THERE!
RIDICULOUS!
Reply to this comment
by nothappyatall March 22, 2008 4:25 AM EDT
"An analysis indicates the municipal water system in Alamosa is the source of the bacterial outbreak, "

Dont forget what they tell us kids- that bottled water is a waste of money and that it is TAP WATER, and that TAP WATER is safe, clean etc.

Guess they waz WRONGO!
Reply to this comment

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