District 18 Quick Note

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Contact the District 18 Office


Marilyn Parker 18th District Councilwoman
City Hall
601 W. Jefferson Street
Louisville, Ky. 40202
502.574-1118
marilyn.parker@louisvilleky.gov

Daniel Luckett Jr
Legislative Aide
502.574-1118
daniel.luckett@louisvilleky.gov

Crime Maps Available Online:

Check Crime in Louisville on a Map

Subscribe to Crime Alerts in Louisville

Snow Events

The Metro snow removal progress can be followed via an interactive online map. Click here to view the Snow Map.

For State snow routes: 
Updates: "ky.gov" OR- Visit KYDOT Snow Maps for snow and ice resources, like priority route maps, tips and highway district updates.


Important Numbers

LMPD 8th Division: 574-2258
LMPD 6th Division: 574-2187
LMPD Anonymous Tipline: 574-LMPD (5673)
LMPD Non-emergency#: 574- 2111
Metro Safe: 572-3460
Metro Call: 311 or 574-5000
Metro Animal Services: 473-7387
Metro Codes & Regulations: 574-2508
Metro Health & Wellness: 574-6520
Metro Planning & Design: 574-6230
Metro Public Works: 574-5810
Metro Parks: 574-7275
Metro Air Pollution Control: 574-6000
Eastern Area Community Ministries: 426-2824
Adult Protective Services: 595-4803
Child Protective Services: 595-4550
Ky. Poison Control Center: 589-8222
Louisville Water Company: 583-6610
MSD: 540-6000
LG&E: 589-1444
TARC: 585-1234
Brightside: 574-2613
Mayor Greenburg's Office: 574-2003
Jefferson County Clerk's Office: 574-5700
Louisville FREE Public Library: 574-1611
Louisville Zoo: 459-2181
Ky. Science Center: 561-6100

 

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From the Louisville Water Company: You can trust the quality of Louisville’s drinking water.

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Photo: Louisville Water scientist collects a sample from the Ohio River on Saturday

Louisville Water continues to reassure the community that our drinking water is safe to drink. The train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio does not pose a concern for the quality of our drinking water.

This weekend Louisville Water scientists analyzed more Ohio River samples and continued to find no detections of butyl acrylate, the chemical that spilled from the train derailment in East Palestine. And scientists working upriver from Louisville see similar data.

The table below shows Louisville Water’s sampling data for butyl acrylate from Saturday February 11 through Saturday February 18. Each day, there was no detection.

Louisville’s data matches what other scientists see.  

Louisville Water is part of a network of utilities that continuously monitors the water quality in the Ohio River. That monitoring system includes ORSANCO, the Ohio River Valley Water and Sanitation Commission. ORSANCO, based in Cincinnati posts its most current sampling data from the East Palestine train derailment on its website. The most recent published data from ORSANCO on February 17 shows scientists working with ORSANCO found only one quantifiable detection at a sampling site upriver from Cincinnati.

The Ohio River is a big river system and that’s an advantage. There are five major tributaries between Louisville and West Virginia that flow into the Ohio River. Every day more than 75 billion gallons of river water flow by Louisville and that amount of water is increasing due to last week’s rain. The dilution power of the river is much greater here in Louisville than it is upriver. That’s an advantage when looking at the river water after a spill.

We’ll continue to monitor along with the 200 water quality tests we do daily.

Bottom line: Your drinking water is safe to drink.


More about the data in the chart

Each day Louisville samples the Ohio River for 30 volatile organic carbon compounds (VOCs) as part of water quality research. Butyl acrylate is a volatile organic carbon compound. Scientists measure any detections in parts per billion. The table includes daily results for VOC sampling and butyl acrylate and there are no detections.