Communities across Ohio have been and to ensure safe drinking water. But in Mansfield, advocates say the city needs new pipes for a different reason. On Tuesday, voters will learn if a new tax to replace aging water mains will be added.
鈥淲e鈥檙e standing where there was once a unit like that," Eric Miller said, pointing to a red brick apartment building with brown balconies overlooking a parking lot in Mansfield.
"The fire was during the daytime. No one was in danger," he continued. "In fact, people had plenty of time to go get their pets, get furnishings out."
What started as a small fire in a utility closet led to the loss of the entire 24-unit apartment building in 2014, Miller said.
鈥淭his hydrant was right here, OK? And there were hydrants along the street," he said, gesturing to a manicured residential street dotted with faded yellow fire hydrants.
There鈥檚 nothing wrong with the hydrants lining the street of the apartment complex, Miller said. But instead of connecting to one of them during the fire, the fire department had to travel more than half a mile to find a fire hydrant with access to enough water.

"You lose property needlessly," Miller said.
A citizen led ballot initiative to generate tax revenue to fix this is on the primary ballot. The is a four-year, 0.25% income tax projected to generate $18 million. Miller is part of a group of citizens who helped place the same initiative on the ballot last November. by about 600 votes.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got 60 miles to go of water mains that are insufficient and that could replicate something like this where the fire will spread from one unit to another or from one home to another," Miller said.
According to the Mansfield Water Repair Department, there are more than 60 miles of water mains that are too small, corroded and in need of replacing. Many of Mansfield鈥檚 water mains were built in the 1920s, and back then, the city put in four-inch mains, which were not sufficient for the city鈥檚 water use, Miller said. Standard pipe diameters for water mains are , according to 鈥淲aterWorld Magazine,鈥 a municipal water trade publication.
鈥淭he problem even for me is I come home, and you can take a shower and run the dishwasher and the washing machine at the same time. You never run out of water," Miller said. "You come in thirsty, you hit the faucet and water comes out. So it lulls you into a false sense of security, and I鈥檓 guilty of that.鈥
Selling voters on infrastructure that is not impeding their day to day life is hard, Julian Papania, a college student working on the campaign, said.

"I think everybody kind of takes our infrastructure for granted, especially if we are getting our necessities met," he said.
In 2021, the American Society of Civil Engineers a D plus. The issues Mansfield鈥檚 fire department has with aging water infrastructure is something many fire departments across the state deal with, President Colin Altman said.
鈥淪o you have that issue where a lot of these cities, especially the older cities, have very old water systems," he said, "so they鈥檙e crumbling or they have to go out of service because of lead or something along those lines so that we can鈥檛 use them for firefighting operations.鈥
This is something he faced while serving as chief of a fire department in Yellow Springs.
"There were very small mains in certain areas of town," Altman explained, "because they had never been upgraded to keep up with the residential development that happened."
Thinking about infrastructure is something Altman hopes communities do before developing, he said, which would help mitigate these problems.
"If we want to develop our communities and grow our population and therefore grow our tax base, that's a good thing," he said, "but do we have the infrastructure to support it? And sometimes I think that's the problem."
This could eventually begin to impact the economies of these communities, Altman said.
鈥淒own the road it could also impact insurance rates," he said. "There are different insurance rating systems out there, but they all have something in common in that they look at the response from the fire department and do they have the water system that is necessary to fight fires.鈥

The economic impact is something Pam Fleming thinks about. She鈥檚 part of an advocacy group called Moms for Fire Safety that鈥檚 supporting the initiative.
鈥淚t鈥檚 all about your economy and quality of life," she said. "Who鈥檚 going to come to a community that doesn鈥檛 have adequate water mains functioning for fire safety?鈥
One of the biggest pushbacks Miller hears is fear about raising taxes, he said.
鈥淲e have people who have been paying city income tax for 40 or 50 years, and they are living in neighborhoods that don鈥檛 have adequate fire protection," he said. "Because their water mains are corroded to the point that they鈥檙e almost useless for fighting a fire.鈥
But his message is clear: The cost of the tax will be less than the cost of losing your home in a fire.