Water woes plague LAX international terminal

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LOS ANGELES — Brown water has led Los Angeles International Airport to temporarily shut off the supply at five gates in its international terminal, which is undergoing renovations.

LOS ANGELES — Brown water has led Los Angeles International Airport to temporarily shut off the supply at five gates in its international terminal, which is undergoing renovations.

The shutdown means carriers parking planes at those gates must use bottled water to replenish their on-board supply or transport water from other terminals using tanker trucks — a lengthy process that can delay flights, the Los Angeles Times reported Saturday.

Water inside the terminal, which is being renovated as part of a $4 billion airport overhaul, has not been affected.

According to airport emails obtained by the Times, the water is brown and contains high levels of bacteria and particles of copper, brass and rust.

The problem surfaced two weeks ago, and the airport originally shut off water to all 13 gates in the terminal. The shutoff is now limited to five gates — four new ones and one old one, officials for Los Angeles World Airports said in a printed statement Saturday.

The airport has tested the water and it is safe to drink, airport spokeswoman Nancy Castles said. But low chlorine levels don’t meet the standards of some international carriers, leading the water to be shut off at the five gates, she said.