FROZEN WATER METERS AND PIPES could cost you! We are getting many reports of frozen water meters and the water department strongly urges everyone, whether at home or not, to at least let a small pencil-sized stream of water run continuously 24 hours a day for the next couple of days.
Even with the temperature rising there is frost in the ground and with no snow cover. This rise in temperature coupled with no snow will drive the frost deeper and make it more likely for pipes and meters to freeze.
Customers should be aware that the first call into the water department for no water due to a frozen meter is free. But any additional calls add a charge of $25 during business hours and a full after-hours call-out charges for after 3pm.
It is more affordable to have faucets slightly running than pay for additional fees for the water department and possible future broken pipe repairs.
Scroll down for additional tips on preventing frozen meters and pipes.
Prevention is the key to making sure water pipes and water meters do not freeze during prolonged cold temperatures. Logansport Utilities has tips for customers to prevent freeze-up in their homes and businesses. Water pipes and the water meter can freeze within hours if exposed to cold air. Frozen pipes and water meters stop water service and can be expensive to repair or replace.
Property owners are responsible for protecting both water pipes and the water meter from damage. Preventing them from freezing is easier than trying to thaw them.
Tightly close doors and windows to the outside. Fill cracks in walls and around windows. Eliminate cold drafts near water pipes and the water meter.
Install storm windows on basement windows.
Eliminate drafts from crawl spaces.
Before freezing temperatures set in, turn off the water to garden hose connections at an interior valve and drain the exposed piping.
Wrap pipes with insulation or heat tape.
It is colder near the floor and along the block wall of a basement than at the ceiling, so make sure warm air is allowed to circulate around water pipes and the water meter. The pipes most likely to freeze are nearest a wall, door, window, and along the floor.
Open the doors to the rooms where the pipes and water meter are located to allow warm air to circulate around them.
If your kitchen or bathroom sink is located against an outside wall, insulate the wall to prevent pipes from freezing.
Open the cabinet doors below sinks to allow warm air to circulate around the pipes.
Flowing water can break up ice as it forms inside pipes. Turn on the water periodically at all faucets that are exposed to cold air when outdoor temperatures remain below freezing for several days. It costs less to run water from all faucets occasionally than to repair a frozen or burst pipe.
If the water meter is in an outdoor pit, check to see that the pit cover fits properly and there are no cracks into which cold wind could blow. The pipes, valves, and the water meter inside such pits should not touch the concrete walls.
Water pipes are frozen if little or no water comes from the faucets when you turn them on.
Open a faucet located near the frozen pipe or water meter to release any vapor from the melting ice so you will see when the water starts flowing again.
Begin warming the pipes nearest the faucet and work toward the frozen section or the frozen water meter.
Blow warm air on the pipe or water meter using a hair dryer. Do not leave the hair dryer unattended or allow it to overheat.
Never use a blowtorch or open flame to warm pipes or a water meter. This is a fire hazard that could cause an explosion.
Once water starts flowing again, open a nearby faucet to allow a pencil width-sized stream of water to flow from the faucet until heat is restored to the area. Please remember that your water account will be charged for all water used.
Eliminate cold drafts and allow warm air to circulate around the pipes and the water meter to prevent them from freezing again.