Metals · 2010

Lead in Santeetlah Shores, NC tap water

Over the federal limit· 1.2× the limit

Santeetlah Shores, NC's 2010 Consumer Confidence Report shows Lead at or above the federal limit (0.015 mg/L Action level). Measured value is 1.2× the threshold.

The measurement

StatisticValue
90th percentile
At the tap
0.018 mg/L

Verbatim from Santeetlah Shores, NC's 2010 Consumer Confidence Report — source document ↗

About 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.

How Santeetlah Shores, NC compares

Nearby systems also reporting Lead:

People also ask

+Is there Lead in Santeetlah Shores, NC tap water?

Yes — Santeetlah Shores, NC's 2010 Consumer Confidence Report lists Lead at 0.018 mg/L. Santeetlah Shores, NC's 2010 Consumer Confidence Report shows Lead at or above the federal limit (0.015 mg/L Action level). Measured value is 1.2× the threshold.

+What's the federal limit for Lead in drinking water?

The federal Action level for Lead is 0.015 mg/L. The EPA enforces this against the regulated reporting statistic (running annual average or 90th percentile), not a single-sample spike.

+What is 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.

+Where does this Lead measurement come from?

This page reproduces the Lead entry from the 2010 Consumer Confidence Report published by the Santeetlah Shores, NC water utility — the annual drinking-water report every U.S. utility is required by federal law to publish. The original source document is archived at /water/nc/santeetlah-shores/2010/source.

Full report
All Santeetlah Shores, NC water-quality data →
Every contaminant measured in the 2010 report.
Contaminant pillar
Lead across the U.S. →
Every public water system measuring Lead, ranked.