Drinking water quality · 1999
· Verified
What's in D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC tap water
1 contaminants were measured in the D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC water system's 1999 annual report. Each is shown below against its federal limit.
- Reporting year
- 1999
- Contaminants measured
- 1
- Over federal limit
- 0
- Approaching the limit
- 0
- Service area
- DC
Where your water comes from · EPA SDWIS
D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC buys its drinking water from WASHINGTON AQUEDUCT DIVISION..
Source
Treatment
Distribution
Also buys water from WASHINGTON AQUEDUCT DIVISION..
Compliance history
Federal Safe Drinking Water Act violation & enforcement records (EPA SDWIS). A violation is a regulatory determination by the state or EPA — separate from the measured levels above.
- Maximum contaminant level exceededHealth-based9 violations on record · most recent Sep 2004resolved
- Treatment technique violationHealth-based5 violations on record · most recent Oct 2004resolved
Source: EPA SDWIS / ECHO. View the full federal record on EPA ECHO ↗
Metals
| Contaminant | Measured | Federal limit | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| LeadA toxic metal that leaches into water from old service lines, solder, and plumbing fixtures. | 0.005 mg/L90th percentileAt the tap | 0.015 mg/LAction level | Within the limit |
People also ask about D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC's water
+Is D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC tap water safe to drink in 1999?
Every one of the 1 contaminants measured in D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC's 1999 Consumer Confidence Report is below its federal limit. "Safe" under the EPA's drinking-water standards is health-based, not aesthetic — but by those standards, no measured contaminant in this report exceeds its enforceable threshold. Individual health concerns (e.g. immunocompromised, infant, pregnancy) may warrant additional filtering regardless of compliance.
+What contaminants are in D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC tap water?
1 contaminants were measured in D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC's 1999 Consumer Confidence Report, spanning metals. 1 have an enforceable federal limit; the rest are detected but unregulated. Every measured value, in the utility's own units, is on this page.
+Where does the data on this page come from?
Every value is transcribed from D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC's 1999 Consumer Confidence Report — the annual drinking-water report every U.S. public water utility is required by federal law to publish. The original source document is archived and viewable on this site. A water-quality report covers an entire service area, not a single address.
+How often is D.c. Water and Sewer Authority, DC's water quality data updated?
Each U.S. public water utility publishes one Consumer Confidence Report per year, covering the prior calendar year's measurements. This page reflects the 1999 report; a new report will replace it once the utility publishes its next annual update.