This southern Utah city says it saved 87M gallons of water with smart meters

From left, Jeremy Redd, Kurt Ivie, Kimberly Casperson, Austin Kruger, Ethan Metcalf, Mayor Kress Staheli, Police Chief Jason Williams, Everest Alegria-Gamez, Craig Coats, Bret Henderson and Troy Belliston in Washington, Washington County, Wednesday.

From left, Jeremy Redd, Kurt Ivie, Kimberly Casperson, Austin Kruger, Ethan Metcalf, Mayor Kress Staheli, Police Chief Jason Williams, Everest Alegria-Gamez, Craig Coats, Bret Henderson and Troy Belliston in Washington, Washington County, Wednesday. (Jordan Hess via St. George News)


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WASHINGTON — The city of Washington, in Washington County, has new Advanced Metering Infrastructure water meters that will go down in the record books, Washington Mayor Kress Staheli told the City Council on Wednesday.

Washington became the first city in the state of Utah to convert to and install the environmentally friendly water metering systems in residential homes.

"Washington city is the first in the state to be 100% smart," Staheli said, referring to the meters. "This is a pretty big deal."

The meters can prevent days or months of unnoticed leaks using sensors that transmit signals to base stations for detection, Washington Public Works director Blake Fonnesbeck said.

Read the entire story at St. George News.

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