Plumbing the ins and outs of the City of Lebanon Authority’s fire hydrants

Plumbing the ins and outs of the City of Lebanon Authority’s fire hydrants

They are so common that we rarely pay attention to them — unless they are smack where we wanted to park. Or our male dog won’t budge from them without sniffing every inch.

“They” are fire hydrants.

The City of Lebanon Authority owns and maintains 1,960 fire hydrants in its service area. Each is color-coded for firefighters: yellow means in-service; black, the end of the water main; purple, out-of-service; and red, privately owned.

“There’s no standard for color coding hydrants — this is our system,” said Brian DiScuillo, COLA water distribution manager. “Most of our hydrants are silver with yellow domes for the top and yellow outlet caps for the sides.”

Every year, COLA invoices municipalities a per-hydrant fee. This year’s fee of $238 is the same as 2023’s, said Tom Deitzler, COLA deputy director, in an email.