| Water Quality
Reports Important
information that everyone should know about water quality and its
relation to human health.
The following sources and reports
contain alarming information about water quality and potential
risks related to tap water and bottled water. This source
information is made available as a public service‚ by non-profit
health organizations whose only goal is to raise awareness and
protect public health. We feel that these sources and reports are
the most credible and factual third party information available
on this subject and highly recommend that people educate
themselves on these issues.
Internet Health: Cancer & Chlorine
Dirty tap water puts pregnant women at risk
Study: Bottled water no better than tap water
Natural Resources Defense Council
Our Children At Risk
Bottled Water: Pure Drink or Pure Hype?
Environmental Working Group
Weed Killers By The Glass
In The Drink
The Breast Cancer Fund
"Environmental Causes/Breast Cancer
Voice of Women‚ Chlorine Connection
USA Today
"Drugs In Drinking Water
Science News Online
More Waters Test Positive For Drugs
What‘s In My City‘s Water‚
City-by-City Water Quality Reports
Find Out What‘s In Your Cities‘
Water‚ From EPA‘s own data base.
The following link will direct you to the EPA‘s consumer
information section where you can see your own water utilities
"Annual Water Quality Report." This is a relatively new
requirement for water companies‚ and one that is still mostly
un-enforced.
On October 1‚ 1999‚ a new federal
law went into effect that requires water utilities to send each
customer a detailed report showing what is in their water‚
appropriately called "The Right To Know Amendment." The most
important thing to remember is that no matter how insistent these
reports are that "contaminants in your water do not necessarily
pose a health risk‚" any level of contamination in our drinking
water does in fact represent a danger to our health. Of the over
75‚000 toxic chemicals used in our society‚ the EPA has only set
standards (MCLs) for about 90‚ and those 90 Maximum Contaminant
Levels are not necessarily set on "health effects." The EPA
considers limited health studies based on consumption of one
certain chemical by a 175 lb. adult when setting these standards.
No consideration is given to the effects on small children or
the combined effects of two or more contaminants‚ which some
studies show are magnified by as much as 1000 times. Water
utilities are only required to test for the 90 contaminants that
the EPA has set standards for.
Nobody knows how many toxic
chemicals may actually be in tap water. According to the Ralph
Nader Research Group‚ after reviewing thousands of pages of EPA
documents acquired through the Freedom of Information Act‚ more
than 2100 toxic chemicals have already been detected in U.S.
water supplies. Virtually all public water systems have some
level of contamination. The water utilities are usually quick to
point out that the chemicals found in their water are "below
EPA‘s Maximum Levels"‚ and in most cases they are. The fact is
that even the smallest trace of a toxic chemical causes damage
and science is just now starting to realize to what extent. In a
recent report from the National Cancer Institute to the Surgeon
General it was stated that "No level of exposure to a chemical
carcinogen should be considered toxicologically insignificant to
humans."
It is recommended that you print
this page and use it as a guide in interpreting your
"Annual Water Quality Report."
Definitions;
MCL: (Maximum Contaminant Level)‚ This is the level at
which the EPA requires corrective action and can impose
penalties.
MCLG: (Maximum Contaminant Level Goal)‚ This is the level
at which the EPA has determined that unacceptable health risks
may occur. Notice that the MCLG is always at or below the MCL‚
the law allows some unhealthy levels of contaminants. A
"Superior" water system only means that it complies with EPA
minimum water quality standards‚ not that it doesn‘t contain
unhealthy levels of contaminants.
ppb: (part per billion)‚ The unit of measure used for many
water borne synthetic chemicals.
ppm: (part per million)‚ The unit of measure used for
chlorine in tap water.
mg/L: (milligram per Litre)‚ A unit of measure used for
contaminants in water.
Most Common Things To Look For:
Lead‚ VOCs (volatile organic chemicals)‚ Organic Contaminants‚
and Disinfection By-Products (THMs‚ Trihalomethanes)‚ are the
most noticeable problems on these reports. Often these toxic
chemicals exceed the MCLGs or healthful threshold. Also these
thresholds are relevant only to the one contaminant; if more than
one is present the thresholds for heath risks drops considerably.
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