Richmond and Henrico’s joint water meeting set for Monday afternoon

Richmond and Henrico’s joint water meeting set for Monday afternoon

Richmond and Henrico County officials will convene together Monday afternoon for a joint meeting on how to strengthen the local water system after multiple disruptions and outages this year.

The meeting — which will involve the City Council, the county’s Board of Supervisors, Mayor Danny Avula and Henrico County Manager John Vithoulkas — will be held from 3:30 to 5 p.m. at the city Department of Public Utilities building located at 1801 Commerce Rd.

Avula suggested the joint gathering earlier this month. Henrico, which purchases water from the city to supply to some county residents, leapt at the opportunity, saying the county had responded to the city’s invitation with 20 proposed dates for a meeting this summer.

“Henrico remains committed to working with our neighboring localities to improve the redundancy and resiliency of our region’s drinking water system,” the county said in a news release.

The exact scope and focus of Monday’s conversation is not yet clear.

The January water crisis that left the entire city and parts of Henrico without usable water for several days sparked discussion about the possibility of a regional water authority, a type of shared governmental body that could oversee water service across jurisdictional boundaries. However, there are several financial and logistical issues to work through before that plan could come to fruition, and it’s unclear how much political support exists.

Officials have also discussed less formal ways to boost regional cooperation and outside insight to Richmond’s struggling water treatment plant, which the city is already working to improve.

Emerging plans to avoid future water disruption in Virginia’s capital city have also drawn the attention of Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

Last Tuesday, the governor’s public schedule listed a meeting with Richmond and Henrico officials to “discuss water delivery issues.” Representatives from Chesterfield and Hanover counties were also invited to the meeting, according to the governor’s office.

In a statement, Avula called the meeting with the governor “a productive step forward” and said he and other local officials appreciate Youngkin’s “shared sense of urgency.”

“We are heartened by the collaborative spirit among regional partners as we continue to work together to ensure safe, reliable drinking water for all our communities,” Avula said last week.

Speaking to reporters after the meeting, Youngkin said “we all experienced the January water crisis together” and praised the city’s initial steps to strengthen operations at the water plant.”

“I have to say, the collaboration that was displayed in the meeting was very encouraging,” the governor said. “There's a strong operational plan. They've changed management at the Richmond water purification facility. And they're working together. So I've asked them to periodically check in with me so that we can make sure that this doesn't happen again.”

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For Monday’s joint water meeting, both the city and county are planning to stream live video of the discussion. The city’s stream will be on YouTube, and the county stream will be available on Henrico’s Webex video platform.

Contact Reporter Graham Moomaw at gmoomaw@richmonder.org