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Boil water notice extended in east Christchurch after bacteria found

A map of suburbs affected by the boil water notice.

Christchurch City Council says a boil water notice affecting several eastern suburbs will remain in place after further testing found bacteria.

The notice, first issued yesterday, covered the Rawhiti water supply zone, including New Brighton, Burwood, Wainoni, Aranui and Southshore. An emergency mobile alert was sent shortly before 1pm on Saturday warning of a public health risk and instructing all residents to boil their drinking water.

In an update at around 12.30pm on Sunday, the council said water sampling across the wider Rawhiti zone was "looking good", but a second positive result at the same location meant the notice could not yet be lifted.

"The notice will then be lifted once we can provide confidence to Taumata Arowai that the water is safe to drink. Part of this assessment will be ensuring we also have at least three days of good results," the council said.

The council would reopen the community drinking water station at 345 Keyes Rd, allowing residents to fill containers with chlorine‑free water confirmed safe to drink.

"Our focus remains on ensuring everyone is aware of the health risk. Staff and contractors are continuing to investigate possible causes and are undertaking further sampling across the zone," it said.

Residents were instructed to boil water used for drinking, food preparation and hygiene.

“Boil all water for drinking, making up formula, juices and ice, washing fruits and vegetables, other cooking needs, and brushing teeth. All water (including filtered) needs to be continuously boiled for at least 1 minute.”

The alert warned, "'Instant' boil water systems do not boil water sufficiently".

"It is OK to use jugs with an automatic cut-off switch as long as they are full. Do not hold the switch down to increase boiling time."

Around 30,000 residents were in the notice area, according to the most recent Census data.

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