EPA Press Release:
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASEDecember 20, 2012
EPA Updates Rule for Pathogens in Drinking
Water, Sets Limit for E. Coli
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) has updated the rule for pathogens in drinking water, including setting a
limit for the bacteria E. coli to better protect public health.
The
Revised Total Coliform Rule ensures that all of the approximately 155,000 public
water systems in the United States, which provide drinking water to more than
310 million people, take steps to prevent exposure to pathogens like E. coli.
Pathogens like E. coli can cause a variety of illnesses with symptoms such as
acute abdominal discomfort or, in more extreme cases, kidney failure or
hepatitis.
Under the revised rule, public drinking water systems are
required to notify the public if a test exceeds the maximum contaminant level
(MCL) for E. coli in drinking water. If E. coli or other indications of drinking
water contamination are detected above a certain level, drinking water
facilities must assess the system and fix potential sources and pathways of
contamination. High-risk drinking water systems with a history of non-compliance
must perform more frequent monitoring. The revised rule provides incentives for
small drinking water systems that consistently meet certain measures of water
quality and system performance.
Public water systems and the state and
local agencies that oversee them must comply with the requirements of the
Revised Total Coliform Rule beginning April 1, 2016. Until then, public water
systems and primacy agencies must continue to comply with the 1989 version of
the rule.
The Safe Drinking Water Act requires that EPA review each
National Primary Drinking Water Regulation, such as the Total Coliform Rule, at
least once every six years. The outcome of the review of the 1989 Total Coliform
Rule determined that there was an opportunity to reduce implementation burden
and improve rule effectiveness while at the same time increasing public health
protection against pathogens in the drinking water distribution systems. EPA’s
revised rule incorporates recommendations from a federal advisory committee
comprised of a broad range of stakeholders and considers public comments
received during a public comment period held in fall 2010.
For more
information: http://water.epa.gov/lawsregs/rulesregs/sdwa/tcr/regulation.cfm
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