Water main break causes Skokie and Evanston boil orders, flooding and students to be sent home

Skokie residents who live near Church Street and McCormick Boulevard got a rude awakening Friday morning after a broken water main flooded the areas of the neighborhood and the cold turned much of it to ice.

Skokie and Evanston officials issued a boil order for drinking water and closed down streets while some schools switched to e-learning.

Skokie officials said the flooding was caused by a burst water main at East Prairie Road and Emerson Street. Both Skokie and Evanston sent out communications instructing residents to boil any water used for drinking for at least five minutes, then let it cool before using it to drink, or in cooking, brushing teeth, etc., to kill bacteria. The Evanston order affected only the part of the city nearest the water main break.

Residents were trying to ward off damage to their properties.

“I don’t want to want to even check (for damages),” Elvir Dizdarevic, a Skokie handyman and resident of the 9200 block of Ewing Avenue, said inside his flooded and frozen-over garage.

Dizdarevic said at its height, flooding was knee high. He said he was concerned for his neighbors who hadn’t opened their garage doors. Freezing temperatures are expected to continue, forming ice, Dizdarevic said, and could make it difficult for his neighbors to open their garages.

Willer Laude, of the 3300 block of Church Street, said it was the first time he had seen flooding this severe on Bennett Street, and that his garage was also flooded. His neighbors on Ewing Avenue said the flooding in that area was worse because the ground is lower.

Residents found that several cars parked on Bennett Avenue did not start due to the flooding. Laude said he was able to move his vehicle before the water set in, but he was trying to help a neighbor get their car out.

Niles Township High School District 219 gave students an e-Learning Day on Friday due to the broken water main, school officials said.  All before-school and after-school practices, activities, and events were canceled, and buses heading to Niles West and Niles North high schools were rerouted to drop off students at their homes.

Evanston Township High School District 202 officials said many of the district’s students, families, and staff live in the area affected by the freezing flood, but the school remained fully operational, with some limited access to restrooms as a precaution to help maintain consistent water flow.

Evanston/Skokie School District 65 officials said Friday had been a previously planned no-attendance day because of parent-teacher conferences.

After a water main burst Friday morning in Skokie, this alley behind Ewing street was flooded, with the water turning to ice. Skokie and Evanston instructed residents to boil water before using it for drinking. (Richard Requena/Pioneer Press)

At a virtual press conference hosted by the city of Evanston, officials focused on the importance of having residents impacted by the flooding adhere to the water boil advisory.

Road closures were in effect on McCormick Boulevard from Dempster Street to Golf Road and East Prairie from Church Street to Golf Road.

A water main break flooded areas of Skokie Friday morning, causing Skokie and Evanston to instruct residents to boil water used for drinking. It also closed roads, sent schools to e-learning and flooded garages, turning to ice. (Richard Requena, Pioneer Press)
A water main break flooded areas of Skokie Friday morning, causing Skokie and Evanston to instruct residents to boil water used for drinking. It also closed roads, sent schools to e-learning and flooded garages, turning to ice. (Richard Requena, Pioneer Press)

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