WALHALLA, S.C. (FOX Carolina) - Overflowing sludge and broken water meters are two major concerns for a pair of Walhalla officials.
Councilor Grant Keehn and Utility Director Laramie Hinkle are continuing to voice concerns about the city’s water fund. This comes one day after city council passed an ordinance that requires people who live outside city limits—and want new water service—to sign a document annexing them into the city, with a few exceptions.
During a tour of the Walhalla Water Treatment Plant, Keehn opened the doors to a supply shed roughly the size of a nine-car garage.
“We would have at least two-thirds of this thing filled up with parts for a situation if you would have an outage,” Hinkle said, pointing to a nearly empty room with a small tractor and a few supplies in the back corner. “As you see, we just don’t have anything in here.”
Hinkle, who has worked in the water industry for 20 years, said an empty supply shed is not normal.
“The rule of thumb is that you have to have backups for your backups.”
But Hinkle said there’s not enough money to purchase supplies—partly because, he claims, the city keeps transferring money out of its water fund to cover other projects.
“I’m trying everything I can to give the citizens a good quality product. Without the money, I cannot do that,” Hinkle worried.
As previously reported, an auditor told city officials earlier this year that the city owes $6 million to its water fund. On Tuesday, Council approved their final budget, which included stripping another $550,000 from its fund.
To the left of the treatment plant’s entrance are two large sludge ponds, which help treat water by removing sediment. Hinkle said there should be two to three feet of water on the surface. Instead, both ponds where solidified with undrained sludge. Keehn added the city was supposed to purchase equipment to fix the issue but never did—again citing funding issues.
As a result, Hinkle said he is using his own dump truck to transfer the sludge to a drying bed in an effort to clean the ponds.
“I want to see the people of Walhalla taken care of, and I will do it at my own expense if I have to,” he emphasized.
But that’s not all.
Hinkle said he has counted more than 300 broken water meters throughout the city—including one at local car wash and laundry mat.
“You can see the meter’s not even going. There’s a man washing his car there and this meter has not been going,” Keehn explained, pointing to its red ticker. “That meter, as I’ve been told by the city workers, has not been running for 19 years.”
Mayor Tim Hall acknowledges the city’s broken meters and said in a statement:
“I do believe that we are losing some revenue from defective meters and incorrect data entry...Our city administrator has estimated that lost revenue from broken meters could amount to a total of around $175,000 over the past four years, which is something we have to address. Council has allocated significant funding for meter replacements in the current budget (enough for over 650 meters) and we have included a similar allocation for meter replacements in the recently adopted budget for next year.”
Mayor Tim Hall, City of Walhalla
Hall has also previously noted that 76% of Walhalla’s water customers live outside of city limits, and said that annexation ordinance was necessary to help fairly spread costs.
“I would challenge you to find a city, Westminster and Seneca have it, especially in the Upstate, that doesn’t use their utility funds for operations. That’s not unusual. That’s not some slight of hand,” Hall said in May.
Hinkle remains worried that water service could soon be interrupted.
“Very likely,” he warned. “In fact, it’s not going to be an ‘if’- it’s going to be a ‘when.’”
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