Background on Drinking Water Standards in the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA)
Summary of SDWA Related to Drinking Water Contaminants:
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The United States Congress enacted the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) in 1974, later amending and reauthorizing it in 1986 and 1996.
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Is the primary federal law that ensures the quality of America's drinking water.
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Authorizes EPA to set national standards for drinking water to protect against health effects from exposure to naturally-occurring and man-made contaminants.
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EPA works with states, localities, and water suppliers who carry out these standards.
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Drinking water standards only apply to public water systems (not individual private wells).
Drinking Water Standards Apply to Public Water Systems:
- Public water systems (PWSs) are those having at least 15 service connections or serving at least 25 people for 60 or more days a year.
- There are more than 150,000 public water systems across the U.S. serving over 300 million people.
Three Types of Public Water Systems:
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Community Water Systems (CWSs)
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Provide water to the same population year-round (e.g., homes and apartment buildings).
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Includes approximately 52,000 systems serving the majority of the U.S. population.
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Non-Transient Non-Community Water Systems (NTNCWSs)
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Provide water to same people at least six months a year, but not all year (e.g., schools, factories, churches, office buildings that have their own water system).
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Includes approximately 85,000 systems.
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Transient Non-Community Water System (TNCWS)
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Provide water where people do not remain for long periods of time (e.g., gas stations, campgrounds).
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Includes approximately 18,000 systems.
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Drinking water standards may apply differently based on a system's type and the size of the population it serves.
SDWA Processes Involving Drinking Water Contaminants:
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Requires EPA to develop a list of unregulated contaminants that are known or may occur in drinking water.
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Published every five years.
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Requires EPA to decide whether to regulate at least five CCL contaminants with a drinking water standard every five years.
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Specifies three criteria (adverse health effects, occurrence in public water systems, meaningful opportunity for health risk reduction).
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Requires EPA to establish criteria for a program to monitor at least 30 unregulated contaminants every five years.
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If EPA decides to regulate a contaminant via the regulatory determination process, the agency has 24 months from the time of the determination to propose a regulation and 18 months from the proposal to finalize the regulation.
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The SDWA requires evaluation of a number of factors in the standard setting process.
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Requires EPA to review each standard every six years and, if appropriate, revise the standard.
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Any revision must maintain or improve public health protection.
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If a standard is revised, EPA goes through the standard setting process again and evaluates a number of factors.
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Requires EPA to assemble and maintain a national drinking water contaminant occurrence database using information for both regulated and unregulated contaminants in public water systems.
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For more information on broader provisions of SDWA, select the Safe Drinking Water Act website.