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• people at Honolulu Board of Water Supply, and they're probably the hardest working <br />people I know. They try to do the best for everybody. The fact that they're running out <br />of water is not their fault. <br />HERKES: <br />that. <br />Thank you. l don't agree, but thank you. I would have expected <br />IRVINE: Maybe we could work out a system and start selling water to them <br />if we have so much here, and then your department will just make enough money to <br />pay off the debt for Sewers. <br />PAVAO: <br />RAY: <br />Good idea. Good idea. <br />Okay, let's get back on track here. Other comments? <br />SANTANGELO: Jiro, when you said you're injecting this back into the ground, <br />where are you injecting this? Just general location. At 500 foot, 10,000 foot? <br />SUMADA: Well, in Kona we are. <br />HERKES: Below the IUC? <br />RAY: It's Kealakehe. <br />SUMADA: At Kealakehe, the treatment plant. <br />SANTANGELO: Okay, and what quality water are you injecting? <br />SUMADA: I think it's R2. <br />SANTANGELO: R2? So, R1 is what? <br />SUMADA: R1 is at a quality that it can be re -used. <br />SANTANGELO: Potable. <br />SUMADA: No, it's not potable, but it can be used for irrigation, like on golf <br />courses or in agricultural purposes with some restrictions. <br />SANTANGELO: There is none that can be recycled in potable, but isn't there a <br />scientific point at which we call it potable? Now, here's the thing, again, 1 went through <br />a whole bunch of this stuff. It's beyond me, and that's why I say, we've got to look at <br />what's really our purview, but in most large municipalities, you don't put the two <br />together. <br />24 <br />