# Brunswick, MD — Drinking Water Quality (2024)

> Contaminant levels for the Brunswick, MD public water system from its 2024 Consumer Confidence Report, compared to federal limits.

- Page: https://www.thewatermap.com/water/md/brunswick/2024
- JSON API: https://www.thewatermap.com/api/water/md/brunswick/2024
- Source: the utility's annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR)
- Verification: transcribed by a model, cross-checked by a second model, approved before publishing
- Reporting year: 2024
- Contaminants measured: 8
- Contaminants with a federal limit: 8
- Contaminants at or above the federal limit: 2
- Part of The Water Map — https://www.thewatermap.com

## Contaminants measured

| Contaminant | Category | Measured level | Sampling context | Federal limit | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorine | Disinfectants | 1.6–1.9 mg/L (Range) | System-wide | 4 mg/L (MCLG) | Within the limit |
| HAA5 | Disinfection byproducts | 22.22–63.66 ug/L (Range) | System-wide | 60 ug/L (MCL) | At or above the limit |
| TTHM | Disinfection byproducts | 24.62–92.76 ug/L (Range) | System-wide | 80 ug/L (MCL) | At or above the limit |
| Nitrate | Inorganic chemicals | 32–1.2 mg/L (Range) | System-wide | 10 mg/L (MCLG) | Within the limit |
| Barium | Metals | 0.046–0.046 mg/L (Range) | System-wide | 2 mg/L (MCLG) | Within the limit |
| Copper | Metals | Not detected mg/L (90th percentile) | At the tap | 1.3 mg/L (MCLG) | Within the limit |
| Lead | Metals | Not detected ug/L (Range) | At the tap | 0 ug/L (MCLG) | None detected |
| Combined Radium | Radionuclides | 0–1.8 pCi/L (Range) | System-wide | 0 pCi/L (MCLG) | Detected — no federal limit |

## What these contaminants are

- **Chlorine** — A disinfectant added to drinking water to kill bacteria and viruses. Effective and necessary, but high residual levels can cause taste and odor issues; the EPA caps the residual disinfectant level.
- **HAA5** — Haloacetic acids — a group of five disinfection byproducts formed when disinfectants react with organic matter. Long-term exposure above the federal limit is associated with an increased cancer risk.
- **TTHM** — Total trihalomethanes — a group of four chemicals (including chloroform) formed when chlorine reacts with natural organic matter. Long-term exposure above the federal limit is linked to liver, kidney, and central-nervous-system effects and increased cancer risk.
- **Nitrate** — A compound from fertilizer runoff, septic systems, and erosion of natural deposits. Levels above the federal limit can cause 'blue baby syndrome,' a serious oxygen-transport condition in infants.
- **Barium** — A metal from erosion of natural deposits and industrial discharge. Long-term exposure above the federal limit can raise blood pressure.
- **Copper** — A metal that enters water from corroding household plumbing. Short-term exposure causes stomach distress; long-term exposure can damage the liver and kidneys.
- **Lead** — A toxic metal that leaches into water from old service lines, solder, and plumbing fixtures. There is no safe level of lead; it harms brain development in children and raises blood pressure in adults. The EPA sets an action level, not a health goal above zero.
- **Combined Radium** — Combined radium-226 and radium-228 — naturally occurring radioactive elements. Long-term exposure above the federal limit increases the risk of bone cancer.

## How to read this

- A water-quality report covers an entire service area, not a single address.
- 'Federal limit' is the EPA standard (MCL, action level, treatment technique, etc.) that the measured level is compared against.
- 'At or above the federal limit' means the utility's own reported figure met or exceeded that standard.

_Figures are the utility's own published numbers. Generated 2026-05-25 from thewatermap.com._
