The water utility in Wisconsin’s capital city combs older neighborhoods to find old private wells as part of efforts to protect its groundwater supply.
Some people who live in older neighborhoods in Madison, Wis., are surprised to find Kevin Miller at their door, asking to look for a private well on their property.Often their response is, “We don’t have a well. We’ve had city water for 30 years,” says Miller, a water-quality aide (and designated “well hunter”) with the Madison Water Utility. Sometimes those residents are wrong — they do have a well, an artifact of earlier times that while no longer in use creates a conduit to one of the aquifers that supply the city’s drinking water.Finding and abandoning those wells is a part
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