Richmond officials issued a new boil water advisory Tuesday for large swaths of the city, less than six months after a catastrophic water crisis left much of the region without safe drinking water for days.

“People can use the water,” Avula said. “They just need to boil it before they drink it,” Mayor Danny Avula said in a virtual press conference Tuesday afternoon, adding that the city doesn’t currently have plans to distribute bottled water.

The latest advisory, announced by the city of Richmond in coordination with the Virginia Department of Health late Tuesday morning, affects residents served by the Ginter Park Tank, including neighborhoods such as Byrd Park, Brookland Park, Carver, Carytown, Chamberlayne, the Fan, Jackson Ward, Oregon Hill, Randolph and the VCU Monroe Park campus.

Some customers may experience total service loss or low pressure, Avula advised. Others may not notice a change, but officials urged all residents to conserve water immediately and to boil water before consuming it.

“This advisory comes after the city’s water treatment plant experienced an operational issue in the early morning hours on Tuesday, May 27, and after the water system had been restored to full production,” the city said in a statement. “The filters re-clogged after running at full production for over an hour.”

The pressure drop has impacted the Ginter Park tank, and while the city says it is monitoring efforts to restore full pressure, no timeline has been given. The city warned that the list of affected areas could grow if usage continues to outpace supply.

“As a cautionary measure, all residents are asked to conserve water to ensure all needs are met during this time,” the statement said. “We will continue to monitor the situation closely and provide updates to our customers as new information becomes available.”

Officials urged residents to avoid drinking tap water, making ice, brushing teeth, cooking, or washing food or dishes with unboiled tap water. Full water safety guidelines and neighborhood maps are available at rva.gov .

It’s not clear how long the advisory will last. The water levels in the city’s reservoir need to be at a certain height for water testing to begin, Avula explained. Then, the Virginia Department of Health must conduct two tests, between 16 and 24 hours apart, in order for the boil water advisory to be lifted.“The sooner the reservoir fills up and, you know, the entire system is pressurized, the better,” Avula said.

The advisory is likely to draw renewed scrutiny to Richmond’s water system, which remains under investigation following the massive January breakdown that left thousands without water or usable water pressure for nearly a week.

In April, the Virginia Department of Health released a scathing 314-page report on the January event, calling it “completely avoidable” and the result of “a long chain of preventable failures” at the city’s century-old Water Treatment Plant.

“This crisis could have been prevented with better operational decisions,” State Health Commissioner Dr. Karen Shelton said at the time. “Our goal now is to ensure corrective actions are taken swiftly and effectively, so Richmond-area families can trust their water supply.”

The report, based on an independent probe by the engineering firm Short Elliott Hendrickson, detailed a cascade of failures , such as untested batteries, broken valves and neglected emergency protocols. When a winter storm knocked out overhead power lines on Jan. 6, the plant’s backup systems failed, flooding underground equipment rooms and halting production.

The city’s response was slow and, in many cases, ineffective. By the time Richmond issued a boil advisory that afternoon, pressure had already dropped dangerously low. Water systems in Henrico, Hanover and Goochland counties, which connect to Richmond’s, were also impacted. Full restoration didn’t come until Jan. 9, and the boil order wasn’t lifted until Jan. 11.

Gov. Glenn Youngkin called the disruption “unacceptable” and said, “It should never happen again.”

As a result of the January failure, the city received a second formal notice of violation and is now under a mandate to develop and implement a corrective action plan. The SEH report identified over $63 million in additional needed improvements, on top of $60 million already proposed in the city’s capital plan.

Those upgrades include modernizing electrical systems, automating emergency operations, and redesigning the clearwell overflow system to prevent future floods.

While Mayor Danny Avula said he was “incredibly proud” of the work done so far by the Department of Public Utilities, the VDH’s findings painted a picture of what one official called a “culture of complacency,” where temporary workarounds were the norm and long-standing vulnerabilities went unresolved.

Now, just weeks later, the system has suffered another setback.

The city said it will continue to post updates on its website and social media platforms. Residents are encouraged to check those resources regularly and to follow all water safety precautions until the advisory is lifted.

Virginia Mercury reporter Charlotte Rene Woods contributed to this story.

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