
6574
North State Road 7
Suite 143
Coconut Creek, FL 33073
SYSTEMS
FOR WELL WATER
Reverse
Osmosis Systems
Aeration Systems
Chlorination
Systems
Iron/ Greensand
Systems
Ozone
Systems
Ultraviolet
Sterilizers
Acid
Neutralizers
What's
In My Water?
How to Correct Promlems with
Well Water
Technical Diagrams
Frequently Asked Questions
![]()
![]()
SYSTEMS
FOR CITY WATER
Water
Softeners
Backwashing
Carbon filters
Reverse
Osmosis Systems
Water Ionizers
Carbon
Block Filter Systems
Whole
House Systems
What's
In My Water?
Citry Water Whole House System
![]()
AIR
PURIFICATION
Whole
House Systems
Residential UV
Systems
Portable
Systems
What's
In My Air?
![]()
SYSTEMS
FOR POOLS
Ionization
Systems
![]()
What You Should Know About Your Water
H2 and O. If you think that s all your water contains, think again. A lot can happen on the way to the tap or bottle. Water can pick up healthy minerals like magnesium and calcium as it travels through rock formations. It can become laced with pesticides that are washed into rivers and streams. The chlorine thats used to disinfect it can react with decaying leaves to form toxic byproducts. And even the purest water can become contaminated with lead from the pipes in your home.
To help you find out whats in your tap water and more about bottled water and water filters, here are some useful links.
Whats in your tap water...
Start with the Consumer Confidence Report. This is the annual accounting Congress told the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to require 55,000 public water utilities to make available to their consumers. Some of these Reports are, admittedly, not easy to read, but they do describe where the utilities get their drinking water, how that water is being protected, which potential contaminants in the water have violated EPA standards, and what the utilities are doing to correct any problems.
* For a fact sheet on these Reports, visit
* To find out how to get a copy, call your local water company. Or, look for a copy on the Internet at http://yosemite.epa.gov/ogwdw/ccr.nsf/4de148880a628
* These Reports list only those contaminants that exceeded EPA standards during the most recent year. For more information on the levels of other potential contaminants in your water, ask your utility for a complete printout of their analysis.
If you need to test your tap water for lead or other potential contaminants, referrals to state-certified laboratories can be obtained from your local Health Department, the Safe Drinking Water Hotline at 1-800-426-4791, or send an e-mail request to hotline-sdwa@epa.gov.
EPA has issued standards for the maximum permissible levels in public water systems of some 80 potential contaminants that can adversely affect public health and are known or anticipated to occur in these systems.
* For how EPA establishes these drinking water standards, visit http://www.epa.gov/safewater/standard/setting.html
* For a list of the current standards, see http://www.epa.gov/safewater/mcl.html.
* For information about other contaminants EPA may add to its list in the future, see http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/ccl/cclfs.html
Responsibility for enforcement of drinking water standards rests primarily with local jurisdictions. Each state is required to submit to EPA an annual report on the safety violations in its public water systems and to publish and distribute summaries of these reports to the public. EPA summarizes and evaluates these reports in an annual national report and recommends whats necessary for improved compliance with the Safe Drinking Water Act.
* For the latest EPA summary (from 1997), see http://www.epa.gov/safewater/annual/adw.html
To search by location or zip code for information about potential contaminants in local drinking water (for example, from Superfund sites), visit EPAs Envirofacts web site at http://www.epa.gov/enviro/index_java.html
A list of frequently asked questions (and their answers) about tap and bottled water from EPA http://www.epa.gov/safewater/faq/faq.html#03
Disinfection Byproducts
* Fact sheet on EPAs proposal to lower the maximum permissible level of TTHMs (the most common disinfection byproducts) to 80 ppm. http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/mdbp/dbp1.html
* Guidance for people with severely weakened immune systems from EPA and the Centers for Disease Control(CDC)at http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/crypto.html
* EPA fact sheet on the arsenic standards at http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/ars/arsenic.html#sch
* Frequently Asked Questions about Arsenic in Drinking Water, from the Natural Resources Defense Council, at http://www.nrdc.org/water/drinking/qarsenic.asp
For the report Arsenic and Old Laws, A Scientific and Public Health Analysis of Arsenic Occurrence in Drinking Water, Its Health Effects, and EPAs Outdated Arsenic Tap Water Standard from the Natural Resources Defense Council, see http://www.nrdc.org/water/drinking/arsenic/aolinx.asp
* Questions and answers about lead in drinking water from EPA at http://www.epa.gov/safewater/Pubs/lead1.html
other inorganic chemicals (cadmium, copper, mercury, etc.) in drinking water
* http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/dwh/c-ioc.html
Synthetic organic chemicals (PCBs, pesticides, etc.) in drinking water
* http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/dwh/c-soc.html Volatile organic chemicals (vinyl chloride, benzene, etc.) in drinking water
* http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/dwh/c-voc.html
Before purchasing a home system, always verify that the system you are interested in has passed NSF testing. Get their booklet Water Wise by calling 1-877-8-NSF-HELP, or find the information on their website at http://www.nsf.org/Certified/Dwatertu_inf.cfm.
The Water Quality Association (WQA), a professional association of water treatment technicians, also tests water treatment equipment. They award their Gold Seal only to those systems that have met or exceeded industry standards for contaminant reduction performance, structural integrity, and materials safety. Check their website at http://www.wqa.org/goldseal/
Consumer Reports analyzed inexpensive faucet-mounted and carafe filters in October, 1999, and more expensive reverse-osmosis systems in July, 1997. Check your local library for copies, or visit their website at http://www.consumerreports.org/.
NSF International also has its own voluntary certification program for bottled water. For names of companies that NSF has verified as complying with every appropriate safety regulation, call 1-877-NSF-HELP or visit http://www.nsf.org/Certified/BWPI/.
In 1999, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), an environmental group headquartered in New York, reported in Bottled Water: Pure Drink or Pure Hype? on the results of a four-year study of 103 brands of bottled water available in the U.S. For a copy of the report, see http://www.nrdc.org/water/drinking/bw/bwinx.asp
In February, 2000, FDA proposed that water bottlers be required to provide the same kind of information about their products that water utility companies must make available about tap water in the Consumer Confidence Reports. For the text of FDAs proposal published in the Federal Register, see http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/~lrd/fr000222.html
A list of frequently asked questions (and their answers) about tap and bottled water from EPA http://www.epa.gov/safewater/faq/faq.html#03
EPAs recommendations for those with private drinking water wells http://www.epa.gov/safewater/pwells1.html
EPAs Water on Tap: A Consumers Guide to the Nations Drinking Water (1997) http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/wot/ontap.html
EPAs How Safe Is My Drinking Water? http://www.epa.gov/OGWDW/wot/howsafe.html
Children and Drinking Water Standards, an EPA publication with information about how whats in water affects children. http://www.epa.gov/safewater/kids/health.html
An EPA glossary of drinking water terminology. http://www.epa.gov/safewater/glossary.htm An EPA description of whats being done to protect sources of ground water http://www.epa.gov/safewater/protect.html