Drinking water quality legislation of the United States

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In the United States, public drinking water is governed by the laws and regulations enacted by the federal and state governments. Certain ordinances may also be created at a more local level. The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) is the principal federal law. The SDWA authorizes the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to create and enforce regulations to achieve the SDWA goals.

Federal requirements

The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) is the principal federal law concerning drinking water. SDWA authorized the EPA to promulgate regulations regarding water supply. The major regulations are in Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations: 40 CFR Parts 141, 142 and 143. Parts 141, 142, and 143 regulate primary contaminants, implementation by states, and secondary contaminants. Primary contaminants are those with health impacts. State implementation allows states to be the primary regulators of the water supplies (rather than EPA) provided they meet certain requirements. Secondary contaminants generally cause aesthetic problems and are not directly harmful.

The SDWA also contains provisions that require water supplies to develop emergency plans, water supply operators to be licensed, and watersheds to be protected.

See Portland Water Bureau for an example of how the regulations were applied to a public water system.

National Primary Drinking Water Regulations

Types of water systems

The long and complicated Part 141 regulates public water systems based on size (population served) and type of water consumers. Larger water systems and water systems serving year-round residents (cities) have more requirements than smaller water systems or those serving different people each day (e.g., a shopping mall). In 2009, public water systems on commercial airlines were included.[1]

Control of contaminants

The regulations divide up contaminants into classes. Some classes are inorganic, organic, lead and copper (regulated separately from inorganic), bacteriological, and radiological. Classes may be subdivided as necessary. Regulations may require certain maximum contaminant levels or may require specific treatment techniques.

Regulation of specific groups of contaminants is often termed a "rule". These are also generally organized in the code as "Subparts".

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Monitoring and reporting

Testing is required to determine compliance with maximum contaminant levels. The code specifies when and how samples are to be taken and analyzed. For example:

  • The Information Collection Rule required large public water systems to collect samples in the late 1990s to provide data for designing new regulations or revising regulations related to pathogen contamination in surface water and disinfection byproduct production.[2]
  • The Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rules require certain water systems to test for contaminants which do not yet have drinking water limits. The resulting information is used to prioritize the regulation of new contaminants. Section 141.40 includes the latest list of proposed contaminants.[3] In 2012, the third set of contaminants (UCMR3) replaced the previous set (UCMR2).[4]

The code specifies who must be notified and the manner of the notification. One such provision is Subpart O, Consumer Confidence Reports. These reports are a summary of the water supplies sources and water quality testing results. The reports must be sent to all customers annually.[5][6] Subpart Q regulates how violations must be reported.[7]

National Primary Drinking Water Regulations implementation

The implementation regulations in Part 142 were issued pursuant to the Public Health Service Act and the SDWA They govern how states and Indian tribes can enforce the federal rules. Generally, a state must incorporate the requirements of the National Primary Drinking Water Regulations into the state's own regulations. States may be more stringent, but not less stringent, than the federal rules. Federal funding is available to states that implement or enforce some or all of the federal requirements.

The entity responsible for enforcement is said to have "Primacy".

National Secondary Drinking Water Regulations

The relatively short Secondary Regulations at Part 143 provide guidance but do not actually regulate public water systems. "The regulations are not Federally enforceable but are intended as guidelines for the States."[8] Although not federally enforceable, some states regulate the secondary contaminants.

The guidelines include recommendations for maximum concentrations for 15 contaminants, when to sample, and how to analyze the samples.

Some contaminants in the Secondary Regulations are also regulated in the Primary Regulations. This generally occurs when a contaminant is a nuisance at a low level, but toxic at a higher concentration.

Compliance

Municipalities throughout the United States, from the largest cities to the smallest towns, sometimes fail to meet EPA standards. The EPA may fine the jurisdiction responsible for the violation, but this does not always motivate the municipality to take corrective action. In such cases, non-compliance with EPA may continue for many months or years after the initial violation. This could result from the fact that the city simply doesn't have the financial resources necessary to replace aging water pipes or upgrade their purification equipment. In rare cases, the source water used by the municipality could be so polluted that water purification processes can't do an adequate job. This can occur when a town is downstream from a large sewage treatment plant or large-scale agricultural operations. Citizens who live in such places—especially young children, the elderly, or people of any age with autoimmune deficiencies—may suffer serious health complications as a long-term result of drinking water from their own taps.[citation needed]

State requirements

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California

Timeline of existing federal water and state drinking water quality regulations:

  • National Interim Primary Drinking Water Regulations (NIPDWR)
  • Phase 1 standards
    • Promulgated 1987
    • Contained 8 contaminants
    • Targeted: VOCs
  • Phase 2 standards
    • Promulgated 1991
    • Contained 36 contaminants
    • Targeted: VOCs, SOCs, and IOCs
  • Phase 5 standards
    • Promulgated 1992
    • Contained 23 contaminants
    • Targeted: VOCs, SOCs, and IOCs
  • Surface Water Treatment Rule (SWTR)
    • Promulgated 1989
    • Contained 5 contaminants
    • Targeted: Microbiological and Turbidity
  • Stage 1 Disinfectant/Disinfection By-product(D/DBP) Rule
    • Promulgated 1998
    • Contained 14 contaminants
    • Targeted: DBPs and precursors
  • Interim Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (IESWTR)
    • Promulgated 1998
    • Contained 2 contaminants
    • Targeted: Microbiological and Turbidity
  • Radionuclide Rule
    • Promulgated 2000
    • Contained 4 contaminants
    • Targeted: Radionuclides
  • Arsenic Rule
    • Promulgated 2001
    • Contained 1 contaminant
    • Targeted: Arsenic
  • Filter Backwash Recycling Rule
    • Promulgated 2001
    • Contained -
    • Targeted: Microbiological and Turbidity

New Jersey

New Jersey enacted its own Safe Drinking Water Act in 1977.[9] That statute is closely modeled on the federal act. The Department of Environmental Protection[10] administers the NJSDWA and its related regulations in the state administrative code.

New York

Regulations

Public Health Law Section 225 gives the public health council authority to create and modify the State Sanitary Code. Part 5 of the New York State Sanitary Code (10NYCRR5) regulates water supply.

Public water supply regulation in New York predates the Federal Safe Drinking Water Act by decades. As in California, New York has over the years, in accordance with 40CFR142, modified its sanitary code to implement the rules in the federal code.

Occasionally, the Public Health Law is also amended to regulate water supply, e.g. Article 11 of the NY Public Health Law.

The Environmental Conservation Code[11] regulates the sources and districting of water supply.

Other laws that govern the operation of water supply, such as the Transportation Corporation Law, Town Law, and the Public Service Law, affect water quality indirectly.

Organization

The New York State Department of Health[12] has primacy for most of the water supply regulation compliance determination and enforcement in New York. The department sets general policy and oversees the local units, which may be district offices, regional offices, or county health departments, who oversee the public water systems.

Ohio

In 2014, algae produced toxins that appear as a product of farmland fertilizers' runoff, became a pressing issue in several Ohio cities. As a result, the state legislators drafted a bill in September, which if passed, will require Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to routinely test for the health-hazardous algae.[13]

See also

References

  1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Washington, D.C. "National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Drinking Water Regulations for Aircraft Public Water Systems." Final rule. Federal Register, 74 FR 53590, 2009-10-19. Code of Federal Regulations, 40 CFR Part 141, Subpart X.
  2. EPA (2011). "Information Collection Rule: Background."
  3. EPA. "Monitoring requirements for unregulated contaminants." 40 C.F.R. 141.40.
  4. EPA (2012). "Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule 3 (UCMR3)."
  5. EPA (2012). "Consumer Confidence Reports (CCR)."
  6. EPA. "Subpart O—Consumer Confidence Reports." 40 C.F.R. 141.151 et seq.
  7. EPA. "Subpart Q—Public Notification of Drinking Water Violations." 40 C.F.R. 141.201 et seq.
  8. EPA. "National Secondary Drinking Water Regulations: Purpose." 40 C.F.R. 143.1
  9. http://www.nj.gov/dep/watersupply/pdf/statut_58.12A-1_SDWA.pdf
  10. New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection: Division of Water Supply and Geoscience
  11. 6NYCRR601 Water Supply Permits
  12. New York State Department of Health
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External links