-
Executive Director Richard Harrison will also talk about how some of the agency's equipment needs to be replaced.
-
Local officials say they're completely confident that Cincinnati's drinking water is safe despite low-levels of contamination upstream in the Ohio River.
-
Both Greater Cincinnati Water Works and the Northern Kentucky Water District say no unusual chemicals related to the train derailment in East Palestine are showing up in local stretches of the Ohio River.
-
Greater Cincinnati Water Works is testing the Ohio River regularly and hasn't detected any chemicals from a train derailment at East Palestine, Ohio.
-
Water systems are being shut down and testing is taking place to make sure the water is safe. For now, residents of East Palestine are being advised to drink bottled water.
-
A concentration of chemicals from the train derailment in eastern Ohio has entered the Ohio River. State and local officials say it smells, but it’s unlikely to present a risk to human health.
-
The water quality supervisor for Greater Cincinnati Water Works says he's confident treatment efforts will protect local drinking water from chemicals, including butyl acrylate, thought to have spilled from a train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.
-
A concrete shaft on the side of the Roebling Suspension Bridge holds an important tool for river safety.
-
The partnership between the Hamilton County Police Association Dive and Recovery Team and Living Lands and Waters started with the tornadoes in Kentucky and Indiana last December.
-
When the Clean Water Act was passed in 1972, the goal was that all navigable waters in the United States would be fishable and swimmable by 1985. We're not there yet.