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Home inspections are important to have done on every home being bought or
sold.
Water Quality
Drinking Water
The United States has one
of the safest water supplies in the world. However, national statistics
don’t tell you specifically about the quality and safety of the water
coming out of your tap. That’s because drinking water quality varies
from place to place, depending on the condition of the source water
from which it is drawn and the treatment it receives. Now you have a
new way to find information about your drinking water, if it comes from
a public water supplier (EPA doesn’t regulate private wells, but
recommends that well owners have their water tested annually). Starting
in 1999, every community water supplier must provide an annual report
(sometimes called a consumer confidence report) to its customers. The
report provides information on your local drinking water quality,
including the water’s source, the contaminants found in the water, and
how consumers can get involved in protecting drinking water. You may
want more information, or have more questions. One place you can go is
to your water supplier, who is best equipped to answer questions about
your specific water supply.
What contaminants may be found in drinking water?
There is no such thing as naturally pure water. In nature, all water
contains some impurities. As water flows in streams, sits in lakes, and
filters through layers of soil and rock in the ground, it dissolves or
absorbs the substances that it touches. Some of these substances are
harmless. In fact, some people prefer mineral water precisely because
minerals give it an appealing taste. However, at certain levels,
minerals, just like man-made chemicals, are considered contaminants
that can make water unpalatable or even unsafe. Some contaminants come
from erosion of natural rock formations. Other contaminants are
substances discharged from factories, applied to farmlands, or used by
consumers in their homes and yards. Sources of contaminants might be in
your neighborhood or might be many miles away. Your local water quality
report tells which contaminants are in your drinking water, the levels
at which they were found, and the actual or likely source of each
contaminant. Some ground water systems hav established wellhead
protection programs to prevent substances from contaminating their
wells. Similarly, some surface water systems protect the watershed
around their reservoir to prevent contamination. Right now, states and
water suppliers are working systematically to assess every source of
drinking water and to identify potential sources of contaminants. This
process will help communities to protect their drinking water supplies
from contamination.
Where does drinking water come from?
A clean, constant supply of drinking water is essential to every
community. People in large cities frequently drink water that comes
from surface water sources, such as lakes, rivers, and reservoirs.
Sometimes
these sources are close to the community. Other times, drinking water
suppliers get their water from sources many miles away. In either case,
when you think about where your drinking water comes from, it’s
important to consider not just the part of the river or lake that you
can see, but the entire watershed. The watershed is the land area over
which water flows into the river, lake, or reservoir. In rural areas,
people are more likely to drink ground water that was pumped from a
well. These wells tap into aquifers, the natural reservoirs under the
earth’s surface, that may be only a few miles wide, or may span the
borders of many states. As with surface water, it is important to
remember that activities many miles away from you may affect the
quality of ground water. Your annual drinking water quality report will
tell you where your
water supplier gets your water.
How is drinking water treated?
When a water supplier takes untreated water from a river or reservoir,
the water often contains dirt and tiny pieces of leaves and other
organic matter, as well as trace amounts of certain contaminants. When
it gets to the treatment plant, water suppliers often add chemicals
called coagulants to the water. These act on the water as it flows very
slowly through tanks so that the dirt and other contaminants form
clumps that settle to the bottom. Usually, this water then flows
through a filter for removal of the smallest contaminants like viruses
and Giardia. Most ground water is naturally filtered as it passes
through layers of the earth into underground reservoirs known as
aquifers. Water that suppliers pump from wells generally contains less
organic material than surface water and may not need to go through any
or all of the treatments
described in the previous paragraph. The
quality of the water will depend on local conditions. The most common
drinking water treatment, considered by many to be one of the most
important scientific advances of the 20th century, is disinfection.
Most water suppliers add chlorine or another disinfectant to kill
bacteria and other germs. Water suppliers use other treatments as
needed, according to the quality of their source water. For example,
systems whose water is contaminated with organic chemicals can treat
their water with activated carbon, which adsorbs or attracts the
chemicals dissolved in the water.
What if I have special health needs?
People who have HIV/AIDS, are undergoing chemotherapy, take steroids,
or for another reason have a weakened immune system may be more
susceptible to microbial contaminants, including Cryptosporidium, in
drinking water. If you or someone you know fall into one of these
categories, talk to your health care provider to find out if you need
to take special precautions, such as boiling your water. Young children
are particularly susceptible to the effects of high levels of certain
contaminants, including nitrate and lead. To avoid exposure to lead,
use water from the cold tap for making baby formula, drinking, and
cooking, and let the water run for a minute or more if the water hasn’t
been turned on for six or more hours. If your water supplier alerts you
that your water does not meet EPA’s standard for nitrates and you have
children less than six months old, consult your health care provider.
You may want to find an alternate source of water that contains lower
levels of nitrates for your child.
What are the health effects of contaminants in drinking water?
EPA has set standards for more than 80 contaminants that may occur in
drinking water and pose a risk to human health. EPA sets these
standards to protect the health of everybody, including vulnerable
groups like children. The contaminants fall into two groups according
to the health effects that they cause. Your local water supplier will
alert you through the local media, direct mail, or other means if there
is a potential acute or chronic health effect from compounds in the
drinking water. You may want to contact them for additional information
specific to your area. Acute effects occur within hours or days of the
time that a person consumes a contaminant. People can suffer acute
health effects from almost any contaminant if they are exposed to
extraordinarily high levels (as in the case of a spill). In drinking
water,microbes, such as bacteria and viruses, are the contaminants with
the greatest chance of reaching levels high enough to cause acute
health effects. Most people’s bodies can fight off these microbial
contaminants the way they fight off germs, and these acute contaminants
typically don’t have permanent effects. Nonetheless, when high enough
levels occur, they can make people ill, and can be dangerous or
deadly for a person whose immune system is already weak due to
HIV/AIDS, chemotherapy, steroid use, or another reason. Chronic effects
occur after people consume a contaminant at levels over EPA’s safety
standards for many years. The drinking water contaminants that can have
chronic effects are chemicals (such as disinfection by-products,
solvents, and pesticides), radionuclides (such as radium),
and minerals (such as arsenic). Examples of these chronic effects
include cancer, liver or kidney problems,or reproductive difficulties.
Who is responsible for drinking water quality?
The Safe Drinking Water Act gives the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) the responsibility for setting national drinking water standards
that protect the health of the 250 million people who get their water
from public water systems. Other people get their water from private
wells which are not subject to federal regulations. Since 1974, EPA has
set national standards for over 80 contaminants that may occur in
drinking water. While EPA and state governments set and enforce
standards, local governments and private water suppliers have direct
responsibility for the quality of the water that flows to your tap.
Water systems test and treat their water, maintain the distribution
systems that deliver water to consumers, and report on their water
quality to the state. States and EPA provide technical assistance to
water suppliers and can take legal action against systems that fail to
provide water that meets state and EPA standards.
What is a violation of a drinking water standard?
Drinking water suppliers are required to monitor and test their water
many times, for many things, before sending it to consumers. These
tests determine whether and how the water needs to be treated, as well
as the effectiveness of the treatment process. If a water system
consistently sends to consumers water that contains a contaminant at a
level higher than EPA or state health standards or if the system fails
to monitor for a contaminant, the system is violating regulations, and
is subject to fines and other penalties. When a water system violates a
drinking water regulation, it must notify the people who drink its
water about the violation, what it means, and how they should respond.
In cases where the water presents an immediate health threat, such as
when people need to boil water before drinking it, the system must use
television, radio, and newspapers to get the word out as quickly as
possible. Other notices may be sent by mail, or delivered with the
water bill. Each water suppliers’ annual water quality report must
include a summary of all the violations that occurred during the
previous year.
For more information call the Safe Drinking Water
Hotline at 1-800-426-4791.
How can I help protect drinking water?
Using the new information that is now available about drinking water,
citizens can both be aware of the challenges of keeping drinking water
safe and take an active role in protecting drinking water. There are
lots of ways that individuals can get involved. Some people will help
clean up the watershed that is the source of their community’s water.
Other people might get involved in wellhead protection activities to
prevent the contamination of the ground water source that provides
water to their community. These people will be able to make use of the
information that states and water systems are gathering as they assess
their sources of water. Other people will want to attend public
meetings to ensure that the community’s need for safe drinking water is
considered in making decisions about land use. You may wish to
participate as your state and water system make funding decisions. And
all consumers can do their part to conserve water and to dispose
properly of household chemicals.
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