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ASDWA 50TH SDWA ANNIVERSARY VIDEO SERIES FEATURING June Swallow OF Rhode Island Department of Health

ASDWA 50TH SDWA ANNIVERSARY VIDEO SERIES FEATURING June Swallow OF Rhode Island Department of Health

ASDWA is excited to share the fourth installment of our continuing video series highlighting success stories from the past 50...

EPA Designates PFOA and PFOS as CERCLA Hazardous Substances

EPA Designates PFOA and PFOS as CERCLA Hazardous Substances

On April 19, EPA released its final rule on the “Designation of PFOA and PFOS as CERCLA Hazardous Substances.” The...

California Adopts MCL for Hexavalent Chromium

California Adopts MCL for Hexavalent Chromium

California has adopted a new hexavalent chromium (Chromium 6) maximum contaminant level (MCL) of 10 parts per billion (ppb) for...

Register for the Upcoming EPA Small Drinking Water Systems Webinar: PFAS Drinking Water Regulation and Treatment Methods

Register for the Upcoming EPA Small Drinking Water Systems Webinar: PFAS Drinking Water Regulation and Treatment Methods

On April 30 from 2:00-3:30 (Eastern), EPA will continue the Small Drinking Water Systems Webinar Series, hosting a free webinar...

ASDWA’s Newsroom displays published content covering various areas of the drinking water program in a single feed. All of ASDWA’s news content is also available in our newsletter, the ASDWA Update.
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ASDWA Reports and White Papers

ASDWA collects data, conducts analysis, and provides policy recommendations to educate decision-makers on the states’ perspective on drinking water issues that impact its members.

Visit ASDWA’s Reports page to view our White Papers and additional Reports.

Hidden Consequences: How Congressionally Directed Spending Impacts State Drinking Water ProgramsBeyond Tight Budgets (December 2018)Costs of States' Transactions Study [CoSTS] (April 2018)ASDWA-ACWA Report on Contaminants of Emerging Concern2019 Analysis of State Drinking Water Programs' Resources and Needs

The Association of State Drinking Water Administrators (ASDWA) is the professional Association serving state drinking water programs. Formed in 1984 to address a growing need for state administrators to have national representation, ASDWA has become a respected voice for state primacy agents with Congress, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and other professional organizations.


Our Year in Review

View past editions of ASDWA’s Year in Review on the About ASDWA page.

View ASDWA's 2023 Year in Review

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Understanding Chemical and Microbial Contaminants in Drinking Water: Raw, Treated, and Tap Water

Original Broadcast: September 5, 2018

Slide Decks:

This webinar will cover the spectrum of chemical and microbial contaminants in raw (source) water, to treated water, to water at the tap. The webinar will be presented in three segments to address key issues and questions of drinking water quality. The segments include:

Groundwater Sources—The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is assessing groundwater quality in principal aquifers that are important sources of drinking water and comparing constituent concentrations in raw (untreated) groundwater to human-health benchmarks established for drinking-water quality. Findings on the occurrence of organic and inorganic constituents, including radioisotopes, from 11 principal aquifers across the United States will be summarized. (presented by Bruce Lindsey, ~15 minutes)

Water Quality from Source Through Treatment—The U.S Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) Office of Research and Development and the USGS joined efforts to broaden the scope of existing public drinking water information by providing a nationally consistent and rigorously quality-assured dataset on a wide range of chemical and microbial contaminants present in source and treated waters. The two agencies analyzed water samples for 233 chemical and 14 microbial contaminants in source (untreated, raw) and treated drinking waters from 29 drinking water treatment plants. The results of this collaborative effort, published in 2017 as a series of eight papers, will be summarized, as will a follow-on research publication that applied knowledge gained from this study to better understand the potential for de facto water reuse by drinking water utilities. The importance of collaboration between Federal agencies and drinking-water utilities to the success of these studies will be examined through the experience of a participating utility. (Presented by Ed Furlong, Susan Glassmeyer, and John Sullivan, ~30 minutes)

Water Quality from Distribution to the Consumer—The USGS and collaborators recently began efforts to quantify tap water exposure pathways in public and private water supplies. Future plans and preliminary results of pilot efforts from several homes and offices to collect representative tap water samples for analyses of chemical and microbial contaminant mixtures, bioassays, and site-specific exposure activities based on USEPA ToxCast effects data will be presented. (Presented by Paul Bradley, ~15 minutes)

Speakers:
Bruce Lindsey (USGS)
Ed Furlong (USGS, presenting), Dana Kolpin (USGS, participating)
John Sullivan, Treatment Chemist, Town of Billerica, Department of Public Works, Water
Susan Glassmeyer, Office of Research and Development, National Exposure Research Laboratory, USEPA
Paul Bradley (USGS)