Emergency Numbers

To report a service outage or service problems call the customer service
office at
832-467-1599

Garbage Collection:
Waste Connections
of Texas, Inc.
(281) 446-0239

WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT THE WATER YOU DRINK?

     By the time most youngsters reach the 6th grade, they know that H2O is the chemical "recipe" for water -- or two volumes of hydrogen to one of oxygen.

     Water is the only substance that occurs in all three stages of matter: as a solid, or ice; in a liquid state as rain; and as a gas or vapor in fog, steam and clouds. Because of its capacity to dissolve numerous substances; however, pure water rarely occurs in nature.

     Water is the major component of all living matter. Between 50 and 90 percent of the weight of all living things is water.

     In the United States today, each man, woman and child uses between 100 to 250 gallons of water each day. That amount does not include the water used to process all the goods and services consumed by our families.

     The ultimate source of all our natural potable water on this planet is rain. While we no longer collect it directly for drinking water, it soaks into the ground or runs off into streams, rivers and lakes. Under natural conditions, the water table rises intermittently as it is replenished or recharged, and then declines as it drains into natural outlets and springs.

     Operating under standards for drinking water quality set by the U.S. Public Health Service, our water supply is treated to remove undesirable tastes and odors by aeration -- or the saturation of water with air (usually by spraying water into the air in fountains). Bacteria is destroyed by the addition of a few parts per million of chlorine, and then the taste of the chlorine is removed by sodium sulfite. Almost all supplies of drinking water contain fluorides, which, in the proper amount, have been found to reduce tooth decay.

     The first people to consider the sanitation of their water supply were the ancient Romans, who constructed an elaborate system of aqueducts to bring clean mountain waters into the city. England invented the force pump, and installed the first pumping waterworks in London in 1562. The first municipal pumping station in the U.S. was built in about 1760 to supply water to the town of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. By 1800, at least 16 U.S. cities had water-supply systems.

     Today, modern water treatment technology allows MUDS to supply millions of gallons of clean, potable water every day.
  

 

 

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