Atlanta Recovering From Water Main Breaks
Downtown Atlanta, Georgia, and its nearby neighborhoods Sunday were experiencing the end of a two-day water outage that was caused by the two major water main breaks....
Facts
- Downtown Atlanta, Georgia, and its nearby neighborhoods Sunday were experiencing the end of a two-day water outage that was caused by the two major water main breaks.1
- Democratic first-term mayor Andre Dickens said Saturday that one of the two mains had been repaired. But the city was still under an order to boil water before drinking it, and officials were still distributing bottled water at some fire stations.1
- During the outages, businesses had to close or limit services, while some hospitals diverted patients and canceled some procedures. Dickens publicly apologized for the inconvenience and also for the city not doing 'the best job communicating' in the early hours of the situation.2
- By Sunday night, things were returning to normal, with a Megan Thee Stallion concert and an Atlanta United soccer match taking place as scheduled. The airport was operating normally, and several hospitals announced the resumption of their regular service.3
- Work crews determined that three major pipelines that intersect at Boone Boulevard and Brawley Drive were efficiently aligned. The crews installed new pipes using a different alignment. The specific infrastructure is about 80 years old.4
Sources: 1Associated Press, 2New York Times, 3AJC and 4Axios.com.
Narratives
- Narrative A, as provided by Newsweek. The mayor has shown his lack of experience and has proven he's totally overwhelmed by this infrastructure crisis. He was slow to communicate to the community and leaving people in the dark on this matter put them at risk. This could cost him his job when reelection rolls around.
- Narrative B, as provided by CNN. The mayor admits he may have had some missteps as this situation unfolded, but he's facing it head-on and doing what he can to communicate with his constituents and get things back to normal as soon as possible. If people want to be mad, they should show frustration over the precarious state of Atlanta's unacceptably dilapidated infrastructure rather than the mayor.