On Friday, May 9, 2026, the City of Lauderhill Utilities Department issued a precautionary boil water notice covering customers at 4401 to 4991 N. University Drive after a water main break upstream in the City of Fort Lauderdale. Residents were told to boil tap water for at least one minute before any contact with food, ice, or teeth — and to keep doing so until bacteriological testing confirmed the water was safe. If you live in Miami-Dade, Broward, or Palm Beach, you should assume this will happen on your block at some point. South Florida's water infrastructure is aging into a major modernization cycle: Miami-Dade WASD alone is in the middle of an $8.9 billion Capital Improvement Program covering its three treatment plants and pipeline network. Breaks and pressure-loss events trigger automatic precautionary notices, and they are not rare.
What a precautionary boil water notice actually means
When a water main loses pressure — from a break, a sudden repair, or planned maintenance — there's a brief window where contaminated groundwater can be sucked back into the line. Utilities are required by Florida Department of Environmental Protection rules to issue a precautionary notice in that case, even before any contamination is confirmed. Bacteriological sampling takes 18 to 48 hours to come back, and during that window every customer downstream of the affected zone is told to assume the water is unsafe.
Boiling correctly: it's not as long as you think
Bring tap water to a full rolling boil — large, continuous bubbles breaking the surface — and hold it there for one minute. That's the CDC standard at sea level, which covers all of South Florida. You do not need to boil for five or ten minutes. Longer boiling just wastes energy and reduces volume. Let the water cool naturally in a covered container, then refrigerate. Boiled water is good for drinking, cooking, washing produce, brushing teeth, mixing baby formula, and giving to pets. Bottled water is an acceptable substitute if you have it on hand.
What you can safely do without boiling
- Shower or bathe — but don't swallow the water, and supervise small children carefully.
- Wash your hands with soap and tap water (then rinse), especially after using the bathroom.
- Run the dishwasher on a heated cycle that reaches at least 150°F (most modern dishwashers do this on the normal cycle).
- Do laundry — fabrics are not affected.
- Flush toilets normally. The notice does not affect sanitary drainage.
Inside your plumbing: what's happening during the notice
The water sitting inside your home's pipes at the moment the notice was issued is whatever quality it was when it crossed the meter. It could be perfectly fine, or it could carry whatever contaminant triggered the notice. The longer the notice runs, the more of this water you'll cycle through your home as you flush toilets, run showers, or do laundry — which is actually good. By the time the utility lifts the notice, the water sitting in your pipes is usually fresher than when the notice started.
Ice makers and chilled water lines are the danger
Two appliances will keep producing contaminated output silently: your refrigerator's automatic ice maker and its chilled-water dispenser. Both pull from a small reservoir that does not flush during normal use. We've responded to calls where families realized days later that the kids had been eating ice from the dispenser through a boil water notice without anyone thinking about it. Switch the ice maker off at the lever inside the freezer the moment a notice is issued, and tape a note over the water dispenser button.
After the notice is lifted: the flush procedure most homeowners skip
Pinellas County and most South Florida utilities publish the same recommended flushing checklist, based on EPA guidance. Don't trust the tap immediately when the notice ends. Work through this sequence:
- Run every cold-water faucet in the home — kitchen, every bathroom, laundry, outside hose bibs — for at least 5 minutes each, fully open. Start at the faucet closest to where water enters the home and work outward.
- Run every hot-water tap for at least 15 minutes per 40-gallon tank capacity. If you have an 80-gallon tank, that's 30 minutes. This pushes the old water out of the heater itself.
- Empty the ice bin completely and discard. Run a fresh batch through the ice maker and discard that too. Do this three times before keeping any ice.
- Flush the refrigerator's water dispenser by running 1–2 gallons through it.
- Replace any disposable water filters — fridge filter, under-sink RO membrane, pitcher cartridge — that were active during the notice. Bacteria can colonize the filter media.
- Run the dishwasher empty on a hot cycle once.
- Drain and refill any humidifiers, CPAP machines, or pet water fountains that used tap water during the notice.
Property managers and HOAs: you have a different problem
A boil water notice affecting a high-rise condo or a townhome association multiplies fast. Common-element fixtures — pool showers, clubhouse drinking fountains, laundry-room sinks, lobby ice machines, irrigation systems with potable connections — all need to be addressed by the association, not by individual unit owners. We work with HOA boards and property management companies across South Florida to handle these post-notice flushes systematically: a written checklist per fixture, sign-off from a licensed plumber, and documentation for the board's compliance file. This is especially important after Florida's HB 913 (2025) tightened recordkeeping requirements around building-wide plumbing events tied to SIRS reserves.
When to call a plumber, not just the utility
The utility is responsible for everything up to your meter and the curb stop. From the meter forward, it's your plumbing — and a boil water notice is when defects in your own system get exposed. Call us at 754-707-1774 if any of these apply:
- Brown or rust-colored water keeps coming out after 10 minutes of cold flushing — likely sediment dislodged from inside an older galvanized line.
- You smell sulfur or sewage from a tap — the line may have a cross-connection or a compromised backflow device.
- Your home has a backflow preventer that needs to be inspected and retested. Most cities require annual testing after a pressure-loss event.
- You're on a private well that ties into the municipal system at the property line — the sanitization protocol is different.
- Pressure has not returned to normal 24 hours after the notice is lifted.
How to know when the next notice is coming
Sign up for direct alerts from your specific utility. In Miami-Dade, that's WASD; in Broward, it's your city utility (Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, Pompano Beach, etc.); in Palm Beach County, it's the county utility or your municipal provider. Most have free email or SMS alert systems. Don't rely on social media — by the time a boil water notice trends, your family has already drunk the water.
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