Staff Sgt. Heather Swinehart, Ohio National Guard
A Reverse Osmosis Water Purification Unit (ROWPU).
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COMERIO, Puerto Rico (10/26/17) — National Guard members, including those from the Buckeye State, are working together to supply the local area with drinking water using their Reverse Osmosis Water Purification Units (ROWPU), supplying anywhere from 20,000 to 40,000 gallons of water a day. From the early morning and into the night, area residents with containers and tanks on their trucks make their way to receive clean water.
The 714th Quartermaster Company, 292nd Combat Sustainment Support Battalion, Puerto Rico Army National Guard, operates a ROWPU capable of preparing 3,000 gallons of water an hour, and the Mobile Construction Team with the 200th Red Horse Squadron, Ohio Air National Guard, runs a smaller ROWPU capable of filtering 1,500 gallons an hour. They are assisted by Soldiers from Company A, 139th Brigade Support Battalion, South Dakota Army National Guard, who use their load handling system compatible water tank rack (hippo) to fill water containers for residents and go on missions to smaller, more remote communities that cannot get to the distribution points.
Along with the hippos from South Dakota, local government trucks are also working with the service members to supply water to the region.
“We supply their trucks with water, and they distribute it to the different communities,” said Spc. Jose Bonilla, of the 714th QM Company.
National Guard personnel have been in Comerio for about three weeks and have been fighting the elements the entire time. The area still experiences occasional flooding and mudslides following heavy rain and after the unit first set up by the river, 36 hours of rainfall threatened to flood out the machines, prompting them to move all of their equipment elsewhere.
As a result of the continuing bad weather conditions, the local water company Acueductos tests the water every seven days for microbes and other contaminants to ensure that it is safe to drink, Bonilla said.
But the challenges have not slowed down the Soldiers. Due to flooding, they moved to a new location upstream where they prepared pools to draw from.
“We fill everybody up to capacity when they show up with their gallon jugs and their tanks,” said Master Sgt. Isaac Strickler, with the 200th RED HORSE (Rapid Engineer Deployable Heavy Operational Repair Squadron Engineer) Squadron.
Many of the locals make the trip, bringing water jugs, coolers, tanks, barrels and even rinsed out laundry detergent bottles to hold water, and they have been appreciative of all that the service members have done, Strickler said.
"Most of the local community has been very receptive to us coming here,” Strickler said. “They’re very happy to have us. We have people stop by, giving us hugs, giving us Cokes to drink, and a few families in the local area have supplied meals.”
There’s still a need for purified water while infrastructure is repaired; the National Guard members on ground said they are able and willing to stay as long as their fellow Americans need support. |