








See Also
Forms,
Checklists, and Worksheets for Public Water Systems
Notification Contacts
Regional
Office
Water
Quality Managers
or
Public
Health District
assigned to your
system
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Drinking Water:
PWS Public Notification Requirements
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| Background |
| Under
the Safe Drinking Water Act (SWDA), public drinking water systems
are required to inform their customers of any violations of the
state's drinking water standards. The purpose of public notification
is to inform customers of any potential adverse health effects related
to their drinking water, and what steps they can take to minimize
the impact. (References: 40 CFR 141.32 and 141.35; IDAPA 58.01.08.150.02 and 04). |
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| Public Notification Requirements |
| Effective
May 6, 2002, amendments to the SDWA, known as the 2000 rule, prescribed
specific public notification requirements based on the potential
of a violation to cause serious effects. Violations are categorized
in the following three-tier system: |
Tier 1 |
| Tier
1 notice is required for all violations or situations with significant
potential to cause serious effects due to short-term exposure. Owners
or operators must notify all persons served by the system within
24 hours. Notice is to be made by radio
and television or by posting
or hand-delivery, or other method approved
by the primary agency. Posting must continue as long as the violation
persists.
In addition,
systems must initiate consultation with the primary agency (in Idaho,
the Department of Environmental Quality) as soon as practical but
within 24 hours after learning of the
violation or situation. Lastly, within 10 days,
systems must provide to the primary agency a copy of the notice
plus certification that all requirements
have been met.
Violations
or situations that require Tier 1 notice include:
- MCLs and some monitoring violations for fecal
coliform/E.coli;
- nitrate, nitrite, total nitrate and nitrite
MCLs;
- chlorine dioxide MRDL (maximum residual disinfectant
level) when one or more samples taken in distribution system on
the day after exceeding MRDL at entrance of distribution system,
or when required samples are not taken in the distribution system;
- exceedance of turbidity limit where consultation
does not occur within 24 hours or where primacy agency requires
24-hour notice;
- occurrence of a waterborne disease outbreak
or other waterborne emergency;
- other violations or situations as determined
by the State.
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Tier 2 |
| Tier
2 notice is required for all other violations or situations with
potential to cause serious effects. Owners or operators must notify
all persons served by the system within 30 days.
Community water systems must use mail or
hand-delivery, and other reasonable methods, to notify
customers, unless directed otherwise by the primary agency. Non-community
water systems must use posting, hand-delivery,
or mail, and other reasonable methods,
unless primary agency directs otherwise. The notice must be repeated
every three months until the violation or situation is resolved.
In addition, systems must consult with the primary agency within
24 hours if they exceed the maximum allowable turbidity
level.
Violations
or situations that require Tier 2 notice include:
- MCL, MRDL, treatment technique violations, except
where Tier 1 is required;
- monitoring and testing procedure violations
elevated by the primacy agency; and
- failure to comply with any variance or exemption
schedule violations in place.
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Tier 3 |
Tier
3 notice is required for all other violations or situations not
included in Tiers 1 or 2. Owners or operators must notify all persons
served by the system within one year.
Community water systems must use mail or
direct delivery, and other reasonable methods, to
notify customers, unless directed otherwise by the primary agency.
Non-community water systems must use posting,
direct delivery, or mail,
and other reasonable methods, unless primary agency directs otherwise.
The notice must be repeated annually.
Violations
or situations that require Tier 3 notice include:
- Monitoring violations, except where Tier 1 notice
is required or the primacy agency determines that the violation
requires a Tier 2 notice;
- Failure to comply with an established testing procedure, except
where Tier 1 notice is required or the primacy agency determined
that the violation requires a Tier 2 notice;
- Operation under variance granted under §1415 or exemption
granted under §1416 of the Safe Drinking Water Act;
- Availability of unregulated contaminant monitoring results;
and
- Exceedance of the secondary maximum contaminant level for fluoride.
View detailed listing
of Violations and
Situations Requiring Public Notice (pdf
85 kb, 1 page)
Link to EPA's
Revised Public Notification Handbook (entire handbook, revised March 2007) or Tier 1, Tier 2, and Tier 3 violations,
as well as templates for non-community systems.
Link to Public Notification Template for a Boil Water Advisory Due to Drop in Pressure or Loss of Pressure or Line Breaks. |
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| Lead and Copper Rule: Short Term Revisions and Clarifications |
The 2007 Lead and Copper Rule Short Term Revisions make several changes and add new requirements to the previously adopted Lead Copper Rule. To protect the public's health and to assist public drinking water system owners and operators, DEQ provides the following templates that system owners can use to meet the consumer notification, public education, and public notification requirements of the new rule.
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| PNiWriter (Public Notification Assistance) |
| EPA's PNiWriter allows drinking water owners and operators to enter data into a web-based public notification template to generate public notices that meet federal and state requirements. The program takes users through the 10 required elements of a public notice and allows them to insert and edit EPA's recommended text. PNiWriter is a free program that requires Internet access to use and is available at http://www.pniwriter.org. |
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| Required Public Notice Contents |
| Notices
must contain the following information:
- A description of the violation or situation;
when the violation or situation occurred; potential adverse health
effects; population(s) at risk; whether alternative water supplies
should be used; actions consumers should take; system actions
to correct the violation or situation; expected date of return
to compliance; name, address, and phone number for additional
information; and standard language encouraging distribution to
others.
- An explanation of the reason(s) for a
variance or exemption; the date it was
issued; a brief status report on steps to comply with terms and
schedules; and a notice of any opportunity for public input.
- Revised mandatory health effects language
using language for the CCR rule.
- Additional mandatory language for monitoring
and testing procedure violations.
In
all cases, systems that serve a large proportion of non-English
speaking customers must provide information on the importance of
the notice in the appropriate language.
View Sample
Public Notification Notice outlining the 10 points that must
be included in all public notices (pdf 16 kb,
1 page) |
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| Public Notification Certification Requirements |
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After you provide notice
to your consumers, you must, within 10 days, send your primacy agency
a copy of each type of notice you distribute (e.g., newspaper article,
press release to TV/radio, mail notices) and a certification that
you have met all the public notification requirements. You must
send certifications for both initial and any repeat notices. When
you certify, you are also stating that you will meet future requirements
for notifying new billing units of the violation or situation.
Link to Public
Notification Certification Form (pdf 20
kb, 1 page) |
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| For More Information |
| Revised Public Notification Handbook: Updated March 2007 (pdf document on U.S. EPA's Web Site) |
| Public Notification Handbook for Transient Non-Community Water Systems: March 2007 (pdf document on U.S. EPA's Web Site) |
| North Carolina Department of Environmental Health Web Site (The Public Water Supply Section features 97 various public notification templates.) |
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