Mayor Fleming: Equipment Failure, Not Contamination, Caused Boil Order
Litchfield City Council Meeting | Oct. 2, 2025
Article Summary: Mayor Jacob Fleming addressed the recent city-wide boil order, clarifying that the event was caused by a mechanical failure in the chlorine feed system, not by any external contamination of the water supply.
Boil Order Key Points:
-
Root Cause: A failure in the chemical feed equipment caused chlorine levels to drop below EPA standards.
-
Safety Confirmed: Mayor Fleming stated unequivocally that “nothing infiltrated the water supply.”
-
Response: The city worked with the EPA to repair the equipment and perform a controlled burn to restore chlorine levels.
-
Future Costs: While emergency repairs cost roughly $20,000, officials estimate up to $800,000 may be needed for comprehensive upgrades to prevent recurrence.
Litchfield Mayor Jacob Fleming provided a detailed explanation regarding the recent week-long boil order during the City Council meeting on Thursday, Oct. 2, 2025. Fleming aimed to dispel rumors, asserting that the water supply was never contaminated by outside sources.
“The cause was chlorine levels in the disinfection system dropped below EPA standards,” Fleming said. “I want to make that very clear. There are no outside contaminants of which we were aware.”
Fleming explained that chlorine is essential for neutralizing natural organic materials in the water. When the equipment responsible for feeding chlorine into the system failed, the city issued the boil order as a safety precaution in accordance with EPA guidelines.
The city’s response involved troubleshooting the equipment, ordering necessary parts, and performing a “controlled burn” to push chlorine through the entire water system.
City Administrator Breann Vazquez, who was on leave during the incident but has since returned, praised Interim City Administrator Adam Pennock and the water department staff for their swift response. She noted that while immediate repairs were relatively low-cost, the city is facing significant expenses to modernize the plant.
“We are probably looking to… around $600,000 to $800,000 [for upgrades],” Vazquez said. She added that the city is commissioning a long-term improvement plan to prioritize these needs.
Fleming thanked the residents and local businesses for their patience and resilience during the disruption.
“We will study this, we will learn from this, and we will move forward,” Fleming said.
Latest News Stories
With Maduro, wife in custody, Bondi says they will be tried on U.S. soil
‘Large scale strike’ carried out against Venezuela; Maduro captured
Congress faces govt. shutdown date, health care bills, Epstein on return
U.S. Senate races will decide balance of Congress in 2026
9th Circuit rules against ban on open carry of firearms in most California counties
Trump: ‘Illinois is worse’ as HHS enforces verification for child care funding
Illinois quick hits: 700,000 customers’ health information potentially exposed
Trump vetoes bill easing repayment for Colorado pipeline
Islamic civil rights group says nothing about civil unrest in Iran
Ohio debate over potential child care facility fraud heats up
As Illinois ends grocery tax locals can replace, food inflation debate continues
North Carolina NYE terror attack foiled by FBI, several police departments