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Is Water Safe?
North America has one of the safest water supplies in the world.
However, national statistics don't tell you specifically about the
quality and safety of the water coming out of your tap. That's because
drinking water quality varies from place to place, depending on
the condition of the source water from which it is drawn and the
treatment it receives.
What contaminants may be found in drinking water?
There is no such thing as naturally pure water. In nature, all
water contains some impurities. As water flows in streams, sits
in lakes, and filters through layers of soil and rock in the ground,
it dissolves or absorbs the substances that it touches. Some of
these substances are harmless. In fact, some people prefer mineral
water precisely because minerals give it an appealing taste. However,
at certain levels minerals, just like man-made chemicals, are considered
contaminants that can make water unpalatable or even unsafe. Some
contaminants come from erosion of natural rock formations. Other
contaminants are substances discharged from factories, applied to
farmlands, or used by consumers in their homes and yards. Sources
of contaminants might be in your neighborhood or might be many miles
away. Your local water quality report tells which contaminants are
in your drinking water, the levels at which they were found, and
the actual or likely source of each contaminant. Some ground water
systems have established wellhead protection programs to prevent
substances from contaminating their wells. Similarly, some surwater
systems protect the watershed around their reservoir to prevent
contamination.
Where does drinking water come from?
A clean, constant supply of drinking water is essential to every
community. People in large cities frequently drink water that comes
from surwater sources, such as lakes, rivers, and reservoirs. Sometimes
these sources are close to the community. Other times, drinking
water suppliers get their water from sources many miles away. In
either case, when you think about where your drinking water comes
from, it's important to consider not just the part of the river
or lake that you can see, but the entire watershed. The watershed
is the land area over which water flows into the river, lake, or
reservoir. In rural areas, people are more likely to drink ground
water that was pumped from a well. These wells tap into aquifers--the
natural reservoirs under the earth's sur-that may be only a few
miles wide, or may span the borders of many regions. As with surwater,
it is important to remember that activities many miles away from
you may affect the quality of ground water.
How is drinking water treated?
When a water supplier takes untreated water from a river or reservoir,
the water often contains dirt and tiny pieces of leaves and other
organic matter, as well as trace amounts of certain contaminants.
When it gets to the treatment plant, water suppliers often add chemicals
called coagulants to the water. These act on the water as it flows
very slowly through tanks so that the dirt and other contaminants
form clumps that settle to the bottom. Usually, this water then
flows through a filter for removal of the smallest contaminants
like viruses and Giardia. Ground water is naturally filtered as
it passes through layers of the earth into underground reservoirs
known as aquifers. Water that suppliers pump from wells generally
contains less organic material than surwater and may not need to
go through any or all of the treatments described in the previous
paragraph. The quality of the water will depend on local conditions.
The most common drinking water treatment, considered by many to
be one of the most important scientific advances of the 20th century,
is disinfection. Most water suppliers add chlorine or another disinfectant
to kill bacteria and other germs. Water suppliers use other treatments
as needed, according to the quality of their source water. For example,
systems whose water is contaminated with organic chemicals can treat
their water with activated carbon, which absorbs or attracts the
chemicals dissolved in the water.
What are the health effects of contaminants in drinking
water?
The contaminants fall into two groups according to the health
effects that they cause. Your water supplier will alert you through
the media, mail, or other means if there is a potential acute or
chronic health effect from compounds in the drinking water. You
may want to contact the supplier for additional information specific
to your area. Acute effects occur within hours or days of the time
that a person consumes a contaminant. People can suffer acute health
effects from almost any contaminant if they are exposed to extraordinarily
high levels (as in the case of a spill). In drinking water, microbes,
such as bacteria and viruses, are the contaminants with the greatest
chance of reaching levels high enough to cause acute health effects.
Most people's bodies can fight off these microbial contaminants
the way they fight off germs, and these acute contaminants typically
don't have permanent effects. Nonetheless, when high enough levels
occur, they can make people ill, and can be dangerous or deadly
for a person whose immune system is already weak due to HIV/AIDS,
chemotherapy, steroid use, or another reason. Chronic effects occur
after people consume a contaminant at levels over safety standards
for many years. The drinking water contaminants that can have chronic
effects are chemicals (such as disinfection by-products, solvents,
and pesticides), radionuclides (such as radium), and minerals (such
as arsenic). Examples of the chronic effects of drinking water contaminants
are cancer, liver or kidney problems, or reproductive difficulties.
How can I help protect drinking water?
Using the new information that is now available about drinking water,
citizens can both be aware of the challenges of keeping drinking
water safe and take an active role in protecting drinking water.
There are lots of ways that individuals can get involved. Some people
will help clean up the watershed that is the source of their community's
water. Other people might get involved in wellhead protection activities
to prevent the contamination of the ground water source that provides
water to their community. These people will be able to make use
of the information that local authorities and water systems are
gathering as they assess their sources of water.
Other people will want to attend public meetings to ensure that
the community's need for safe drinking water is considered in making
decisions about land use. And all consumers can do their part to
conserve water and to dispose properly of household chemicals.
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