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400,000 Bouncy Balls Help Protect Against Carcinogen In Water Reserves
When I saw this story today I did a double take, as I assumed it was another one of those "living art" ideas, this time with black bouncy balls vs. multucilored. I was very wrong.
In a step to really "think outside the box", the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power poured 400,000 black bouncy balls into the Ivanhoe Reservior to help protect against the formation of carcinogens in the water.
The water needs to be shaded because when sunlight mixes with the bromide and chlorine in Ivanhoe's water, the carcinogen bromate forms, said Pankaj Parekh, DWP's director for water quality compliance. Bromide is naturally present in groundwater and chlorine is used to kill bacteria, he said, but sunlight is the final ingredient in the potentially harmful mix.
The DWP drop was designed to stop the three from mingling in the 10-acre, 58-million-gallon Ivanhoe Reservoir. The 102-year-old facility serves about 600,000 customers downtown and in South Los Angeles.
More information via McDaniel and Brian White, biologist for the DWP:
---Eventually, 3 million black balls will fill the reservoir. They will stay in the reservoir for 3-5 years.
---The balls are being made by Orange Products,
a company out of Allentown, Pennsylvania. The city has a contract with
Orange Products, which will deliver 200,000 new balls a week to the
reservoir. Basically, Orange Products has shut down work on everything
else just to make our balls.---Was there another color option other than black? No, there was not.
---The balls cost 34 cents each. All together, the balls are costing $2 million. Paid by for you, dear water user.
--The balls are non-toxic and UVA-stable (the sun won't affect them).
Video and images to come!
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June 11, 2008 at 02:31 pm by babblingdweeb, 811 views, 6 comments
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councildistrictfour
Los Angeles, California, United States






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Comments (6)
at 14:51 on June 11th, 2008
babblingdweeb, very good stuff.
at 14:53 on June 11th, 2008
babblingdweeb, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 15:32 on June 11th, 2008
What an odd idea. Odd, but brilliant in its simplicity.
(... Oddball, even! ThankyouverymuchI'llbehereallweek)
at 03:04 on June 14th, 2008
Uhhh... let's think about this quote for a minute:
--The balls are non-toxic and UVA-stable (the sun won't affect them).
Fine if they're UVA stable, but non toxic, yeah right. They're made of plastic or rubber - and some kind of composite material. Toxic? um.. would you eat plastic? Would you eat rubber normally? Yeah, sure in theory, you'll pass it... but ... non-toxic? I doubt it, people.
at 17:28 on June 18th, 2008
Too bad they could not use Water hyacinth ...http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/wq/plants/weeds/hyacinth.html
these guys would do the job..
I am cautious about the use of plastic balls. They will probably end up in the ocean and choke dolphin. :(
Hope no harmful effects result.
at 15:32 on June 21st, 2008
babblingdweeb, I like this story. It's good stuff.