Boil water advisory lifted for one Stackhouse property, imposed on another
The state Department of Environmental Protection announced mixed news about water quality for Stackhouse Management property residents on Friday morning, Feb. 20.
A boil water advisory for residents of Bernie’s Mobile Home Park in Winfield Township was lifted, but implemented at Rolling Valley in Estates in Connoquenessing Township. Additionally, a corrective action plan for multiple Stackhouse properties due to be submitted to DEP on Saturday, Feb. 21, was still outstanding Friday.
Tom Decker, regional communications manager for DEP, announced the Winfield Township park’s advisory was lifted in an email. The advisory was originally placed on Feb. 10 due to a water main break. It also represented the third water service disruption Bernie’s residents have endured since October 2025.
In the email, Decker said several leaks were repaired and sampling was conducted across two consecutive days with satisfactory results.
But water issues are not localized to just one park owned by North Carolina-based property manager Stackhouse Management. Decker said Rolling Valley Estates was placed under its own boil water advisory Friday.
No details as to why Rolling Valley was placed under advisory were immediately available.
The DEP held a meeting with Stackhouse Management on Jan. 27 and requested the company submit a corrective action plan and implementation schedule on how it will address clean drinking water violations at several properties.
These include Bernie’s, Pine Valley, Rolling Valley, Hy-Vue in Clinton Township, Franklin Village in Franklin Township and Sandy Hill Estates in Middlesex Township.
According to Butler County property records, Jones Estates — a company affiliated with Stackhouse — acquired the property from a company called S-2 Properties in November 2019 for just under $1.4 million.
