Litchfield Addresses Week-Long Boil Order, Confirms No Contamination
Litchfield City Council Meeting | Oct. 2, 2025
Article Summary: Mayor Jacob Fleming addressed the recent city-wide boil order, clarifying that the issue was caused by a drop in chlorine levels due to equipment failure, not external contamination. He praised the community’s resilience and assured residents that steps are being taken to prevent a recurrence.
Boil Order Key Points:
-
Cause: A failure in the chemical feed equipment caused chlorine levels to drop below EPA standards.
-
No Contamination: Mayor Fleming emphasized that “nothing infiltrated the water supply” and the issue was purely a lack of disinfectant.
-
Response: The city responded swiftly, coordinating with the EPA to fix the equipment and flush the system.
-
Future Prevention: The city is reviewing maintenance logs and has engaged engineering firms to develop a long-term improvement plan.
Litchfield Mayor Jacob Fleming opened the Oct. 2, 2025, City Council meeting with a detailed explanation of the recent week-long system-wide boil order that frustrated residents and businesses.
Fleming confirmed the order, which was lifted on Oct. 1, was triggered when chlorine levels in the disinfection system fell below required standards. He stressed that at no point was the water supply compromised by outside contaminants.
“The cause was chlorine levels… dropped below EPA standards,” Fleming said. “I want to make that very clear. There are no outside contaminants of which we were aware. There was a chlorine issue.”
He explained that without adequate chlorine, the water’s natural organic materials are not neutralized, which can pose a health risk. The city’s response involved repairing the faulty equipment and performing a “controlled burn” to re-chlorinate the entire system.
Fleming thanked residents for their patience and highlighted the community’s generosity, noting donations of bottled water to local schools. He also commended city staff for their “all hands on deck” approach.
City Administrator Breann Vazquez later added that while emergency repairs have cost approximately $20,000 so far, a larger investment of $600,000 to $800,000 may be needed for comprehensive system upgrades.
“We can never promise that an emergency won’t occur, but… we are taking steps to ensure to the best of our ability that this same issue does not repeat itself,” Vazquez said.
Event Calendar
Latest News Stories
Report: More people continue leaving Illinois than arriving
WATCH: Trump says U.S. will run Venezuela for foreseeable future
World leaders call for UN response after Maduro capture
Democrats slam Venezuelan strikes, Maduro capture
Trump sheds more light on Venezuela strike, Maduro capture
Congressional Republicans support Venezuela strikes, Maduro capture
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