I had a little flare of Civic Duty last week. On my
Wednesday morning walk, I noticed that someone had decapitated a fire hydrant.
Actually, the first thing I saw was that someone had
knocked down a street sign in front of the Kinder Care® center:
Then I twigged to the hole where the hydrant used to be,
and the tire mark that seemed to tell a story of a vehicle coming off the
street, shearing off both the hydrant and the sign, then landing back on the
street.
No water gushing, just the hole and one of the little
flange thingies. Also—no hydrant.
Only, about 10 meters on, there it was, tossed in a little
copse of trees. Presumably the miscreant thought their crime would escape
notice if no one found the evidence?
Well, when I got home I called the Fairfax County
non-emergency line to find out what agency handles damaged fire hydrants. Turns
out it’s Fairfax Water, duh. So I called their report-an-emergency line and
connected with a very nice woman named Leah. She took my information (I had to
look up the address, because it didn’t occur to me that it might be useful,
duh) and thanked me.
(I was a little disappointed that I had to do this by phone, because—I had all those photos. But it turned out okay.)
And blow me—Thursday morning there was a new fire hydrant:
Sign is still down—that’s obviously not Fairfax Water’s
problem.
One more bit of info: while you’re on hold with Fairfax
Water, they play Handel’s “Water Music”. Perfect.
©2025 Bas Bleu







2 comments:
I believe VDOT would handle the downed sign. https://my.vdot.virginia.gov/
Thanks, David--just reported it.
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