Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary
of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Mary Tiemann
Specialist in Environmental Policy
February 5, 2014
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL31243
Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Summary
This report summarizes the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) and its major programs and
regulatory requirements. It excerpts, with several additions, the SDWA chapter of CRS Report
RL30798, Environmental Laws: Summaries of Major Statutes Administered by the Environmental
of the Act and Its Major Requirements
January 6, 2016
(RL31243)
Jump to Main Text of Report
Summary
This report summarizes the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) and its major programs and regulatory requirements. It is an expansion of the SDWA chapter of CRS Report RL30798, Environmental Laws: Summaries of Major Statutes Administered by the Environmental Protection Agency, which provides summaries of the principal environmental statutes
administered by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). This report includes the drinking
water security provisions added to the SDWA by the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism
Preparedness and Response Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-188
)), and lead reduction provisions as
amended by
P.L. 111-380 (including amendments made by P.L. 113-64P.L. 111-380. It also outlines amendments made in December 2013 by P.L. 113-64
(H.R. 3588) to explicitly exempt fire hydrants from coverage under the act
’'s lead plumbing
restrictions.
restrictions). It also includes P.L. 114-45, enacted August 7, 2015, which calls for EPA to develop a strategic plan to assess and manage the risks associated with algal toxins in public water supplies, as well as P.L. 114-98, the Grassroots Rural and Small Community Water Systems Assistance Act, enacted December 11, 2015.
The SDWA, Title XIV of the Public Health Service Act, is the key federal law for protecting
public water supplies from harmful contaminants. First enacted in 1974 and substantially
amended in 1986 and 1996, the act is administered through programs that establish standards and
treatment requirements for public water supplies,
controlpromote compliance capacity of public water systems, provide technical assistance to small water systems, control the underground injection of
wastes,
fluids, finance infrastructure projects, and protect sources of drinking water. The 1974 law established
the current federal-state arrangement in which states may be delegated primary implementation
and enforcement authority
(primacy) for the drinking water program
and the underground injection control (UIC) program. The state-administered Public Water
Supply Supervision (PWSS) Program remains the basic program for regulating the nation
’'s public
water systems, and 49 states have assumed this authority.
The last major reauthorization of the act was done through the Safe Drinking Water Act
Amendments of 1996 (P.L. 104-182), which
generally authorized appropriations for
SDWA
most SDWA programs through FY2003. As with other EPA-administered statutes having expired funding
authority, Congress has continued to appropriate funds for the ongoing SDWA programs.
In addition to reviewing key programs and requirements of the SDWA, this report includes
statistics on the number and types of regulated public water systems
. It also provides a table that
and lists all major amendments
, with the year of enactment and public law number
, and that crossreference. Located at the end of the report, Table 2 cross-references sections of the act with the major U.S. Code
sections of the codified statute, and Table 3 identifies authorizations of appropriations under the act.
Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Introduction
The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), Title XIV of the Public Health Service Act, is the key federal law for protecting public water supplies from harmful contaminants. First enacted in 1974 and substantially amended in 1986 and 1996, the act is administered through programs that establish standards and treatment requirements for public water supplies, finance drinking water infrastructure projects, promote water system compliance, and control the underground injection of fluids to protect underground sources of drinking water. The 1974 law established the current federal-state arrangement in which states may be delegated primary implementation and enforcement authority for the drinking water program. The state-administered Public Water Supply Supervision (PWSS) Program remains the basic program for regulating the nation's public water systems, and 49 states have assumed this authority. The last major reauthorization, the SDWA amendments of 1996, authorized appropriations for most SDWA programs through FY2003. Although the authorization of appropriations has expired for most provisions, Congress has continued to appropriate funds for the ongoing SDWA programs. Table 1 identifies the original enactment and subsequent amendments.
Table 1. Safe Drinking Water Act and Amendments
(codified generally as 42 U.S.C. 300f-300j)
Year
|
Act
|
Public Law Number
|
1974
|
Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974
|
P.L. 93-523
|
1977
|
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1977
|
P.L. 95-190
|
1979
|
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments
|
P.L. 96-63
|
1980
|
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments
|
P.L. 96-502
|
1986
|
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1986
|
P.L. 99-339
|
1988
|
Lead Contamination Control Act of 1988
|
P.L. 100-572
|
1996
|
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1996
|
P.L. 104-182
|
2002
|
Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002
|
P.L. 107-188
|
2011
|
Reduction of Lead in Drinking Water Act
|
P.L. 111-380
|
2013
|
Community Fire Safety Act of 2013
|
P.L. 113-64
|
2015
|
Drinking Water Protection Act
|
P.L. 114-45
|
2015
|
Grassroots Rural and Small Community Water Systems Assistance Act
|
P.L. 114-98
|
This report summarizes the act's major provisions, programs, and requirements and provides statistics on the universe of regulated public water systems.1 Located at the end of the report, Table 2 cross-references sections of the act with the major U.S. Code sections of the codified statute, and Table 3 identifies authorizations of appropriations under the act.
Background
As indicated by Table 1, the SDWA has been amended several times since sections of the codified statute.
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Contents
Introduction...................................................................................................................................... 1
Background ...................................................................................................................................... 1
Regulated Public Water Systems ..................................................................................................... 3
National Drinking Water Regulations .............................................................................................. 4
Contaminant Selection and Regulatory Schedules .................................................................... 4
Standard Setting......................................................................................................................... 5
Risk Assessment ........................................................................................................................ 5
Variances and Exemptions ......................................................................................................... 6
State Primacy ................................................................................................................................... 6
Enforcement, Consumer Information, and Citizen Suits ................................................................. 7
Consumer Information and Reports .......................................................................................... 7
Citizen Suits............................................................................................................................... 8
Compliance Improvement Programs ............................................................................................... 8
Ground Water Protection Programs ................................................................................................. 8
Source Water Assessment and Protection Programs ........................................................................ 9
State Revolving Funds ................................................................................................................... 10
Drinking Water Security ................................................................................................................ 10
Vulnerability Assessments ....................................................................................................... 11
Emergency Powers .................................................................................................................. 11
Tampering with Public Water Systems .................................................................................... 11
Emergency Assistance ............................................................................................................. 12
Additional SDWA Provisions ........................................................................................................ 12
Lead-Free Plumbing ................................................................................................................ 12
Research, Technical Assistance, and Training ......................................................................... 13
Demonstration Grants .............................................................................................................. 13
Records, Inspections, and Monitoring ..................................................................................... 13
National Drinking Water Advisory Council ............................................................................ 14
Federal Agencies ..................................................................................................................... 14
Assistance to Colonias ............................................................................................................. 14
Estrogenic Substances ............................................................................................................. 14
Drinking Water Studies............................................................................................................ 14
Selected P.L. 104-182 Provisions Not Amending SDWA.............................................................. 15
Transfer of Funds..................................................................................................................... 15
Grants to Alaska ...................................................................................................................... 15
Bottled Water ........................................................................................................................... 15
Wastewater Assistance to Colonias ......................................................................................... 15
Additional Infrastructure Funding ........................................................................................... 15
Figures
Figure 1. Public Water System Statistics ......................................................................................... 4
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Tables
Table 1. Safe Drinking Water Act and Amendments ....................................................................... 1
Table 2. U.S. Code Sections of the Safe Drinking Water Act (Title XIV of the Public
Health Service Act) ..................................................................................................................... 16
Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 18
Congressional Research Service
Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Introduction
The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), Title XIV of the Public Health Service Act, is the key
federal law for protecting public water supplies from harmful contaminants. First enacted in 1974
and substantially amended in 1986 and 1996, the act is administered through programs that
establish standards and treatment requirements for public water supplies, control underground
injection of wastes, finance infrastructure projects, and protect sources of drinking water. The
1974 law established the current federal-state arrangement in which states may be delegated
primary implementation and enforcement authority for the drinking water program. The stateadministered Public Water Supply Supervision (PWSS) Program remains the basic program for
regulating the nation’s public water systems, and 49 states have assumed this authority. The 1996
SDWA amendments generally authorized appropriations for SDWA programs through FY2003.
Table 1 identifies the original enactment and subsequent amendments.
Table 1. Safe Drinking Water Act and Amendments
(codified generally as 42 U.S.C. 300f-300j)
Year
Act
Public Law
Number
1974
Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974
P.L. 93-523
1977
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1977
P.L. 95-190
1979
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments
P.L. 96-63
1980
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments
P.L. 96-502
1986
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1986
P.L. 99-339
1988
Lead Contamination Control Act of 1988
P.L. 100-572
1996
Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments of 1996
P.L. 104-182
2002
Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002
P.L. 107-188
2011
Reduction of Lead in Drinking Water Act
P.L. 111-380
2013
Community Fire Safety Act of 2013
P.L. 113-64
This report summarizes the act’s major provisions, programs, and requirements, and is adapted
from a broader document, CRS Report RL30798, Environmental Laws: Summaries of Major
Statutes Administered by the Environmental Protection Agency. It also provides selected statistics
on the universe of regulated public water systems, and lists references for further information on
the act and its implementation. Table 2, located at the end of this report, cites the major U.S.
Code sections of the act and the equivalent sections of the statute.
Background
As indicated by Table 1, the Safe Drinking Water Act has been amended several times since
enactment of the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-523). Congress passed this law after
nationwide studies of community water systems revealed widespread water quality problems and
health risks resulting from poor operating procedures, inadequate facilities, and uneven
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
management of public water supplies in communities of all sizes. The 1974 law gave the EPA
substantial discretionary authority to regulate drinking water contaminants and gave states the
lead role in implementation and enforcement.
The first major amendments (P.L. 99-339), enacted in 1986, were largely intended to increase the
pace at which the EPA regulated contaminants and to increase the protection of ground water.
From 1974 until 1986, the EPA had regulated just one additional contaminant beyond the 22
standards previously developed by the Public Health Service. The 1986 amendments required the
EPA to (1) issue regulations for 83 specified contaminants by June 1989 and for 25 more
contaminants every three years thereafter, (2) promulgate requirements for disinfection and
filtration of public water supplies, (3) ban the use of lead pipes and lead solder in new drinking
water systems, (4) establish an elective wellhead protection program around public wells, (5)
establish a demonstration grant program for state and local authorities having designated
solesourcesole-source aquifers to develop ground water protection programs, and (6) issue rules for monitoring
underground injection wells that inject
hazardous wastes below a drinking water source. The amendments also increased
EPA’ the EPA's enforcement authority.
Congress again amended SDWA with the Lead Contamination Control Act of 1988 (P.L.
100572100-572). These provisions were intended to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water by requiring
the recall of lead-lined water coolers
, and requiring the EPA to issue a guidance document and
testing protocol for states to help schools and day care centers identify and correct lead
contamination in school drinking water.
After the regulatory schedule mandated in the 1986 amendments proved to be unworkable for the
EPA, states, and public water systems, the
104th104th Congress made sweeping changes to the act with
the SDWA Amendments of 1996 (P.L. 104-182). As over-arching themes, the amendments
targeted resources to address the greatest health risks,
added someincreased regulatory flexibility,
provided
and authorized funding for federal drinking water mandates
, and aimed to improve water system compliance
capacity. Congress revoked the requirement that the EPA regulate 25 new contaminants every
three years and created a risk-based approach for selecting contaminants for regulation.
Among other changes, Congress added some flexibility to the standard
-setting process, required
the EPA to conduct health risk reduction and cost analyses for new rules, authorized a drinking
water state revolving loan fund (DWSRF) program to help water systems finance
infrastructure projects needed
to meet SDWA requirements to comply with SDWA regulations and protect public health, added programs to improve small system compliance, expanded
consumer information requirements, increased the act
’'s focus on pollution prevention
through a
voluntarywith a state source water
protectionassessment program, and streamlined the act
’'s enforcement provisions. P.L.
104-182 extended authorizations for 104-182 authorized appropriations under the act through FY2003.
Authorizations of appropriations under the SDWA are identified in Table 3.)
In 2002, several drinking water security provisions were added to the SDWA through the Public
Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-188). Title IV
of the of that act included requirements for community water systems serving more than 3,300
individuals to conduct vulnerability assessments and prepare emergency response plans. The law
also also increased criminal and civil penalties for tampering with water supplies and required the EPA to conduct research on preventing and responding to terrorist or other
attacks.
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Regulated Public Water Systems
Federal drinking water regulations apply to the approximately 152,700 privately and publicly
owned water systems that provide piped water for human consumption to at least 15 service
connections or that regularly serve at least 25 people. These water systems vary greatly in size
and type, ranging from large municipal systems to homeowner associations, schools, and
campgrounds.
More than attacks.
Signed into law on January 4, 2011, the Reduction of Lead in Drinking Water Act, P.L. 111-380, tightened the SDWA definition of "lead free" and added specific exemptions from the ban on the use or sale of lead pipes and plumbing fittings and fixtures that are not lead free. (A subsequent amendment [P.L. 113-64] explicitly exempted fire hydrants from coverage under the act's lead plumbing restrictions.2) Enacted August 7, 2015, the Drinking Water Protection Act (P.L. 114-45) amends the SDWA to direct EPA to develop a strategic plan to assess and manage the risks associated with algal toxins in public drinking water supplies. Enacted December 11, 2015, the Grassroots Rural and Small Community Water Systems Assistance Act (P.L. 114-98) revises and reauthorizes the small system technical assistance program, extending the authorization of appropriations for the program through FY2020.
Regulated Public Water Systems
Federal drinking water regulations apply to the approximately 152,700 privately and publicly owned water systems that provide piped water for human consumption to at least 15 service connections or that regularly serve at least 25 people. These water systems vary greatly in size and type, ranging from large municipal systems to homeowner associations, schools, and campgrounds.
Some 51,350 of the regulated public water systems are community water systems
(CWSs (CWS) that
serve the same residences year-round. These water systems provide water to
approximately 299
more than 299 million people. All federal regulations apply to these systems. Most community water systems
(82%) are relatively small, serving 3,300 people or fewer. Despite this large percentage, these
systems provide water to just 9% of the total population served by community water systems.
In
contrast, 8% of CWSFully 92% of CWSs serve populations of 10,000 or fewer. In contrast, 8% of CWSs serve populations of 10,000 or more
, but provide water to 82% of the
population served (more than 246 million individuals). Among the community water systems,
77 71% rely on ground water
, and
2329% rely on surface water.
Another 18,178 public water systems are non-transient non-community water systems
(NTNCWS), such as schools or factories, which have their own water
supplysupplies and generally serve
the same individuals for more than six months but not year-round. Most drinking water
regulations apply to these systems. Of these water systems, 99%
are small or very small, and
serve populations of 3,300 or fewer and provide water to 83% of the population served by these systems.
Nearly 83,200 other public water systems are transient non-community water systems
(TNCWS),
, such as campgrounds and gas stations, which provide their own water to transitory customers.
Only regulations for contaminants that pose immediate health risks apply to these systems.
1
3
Approximately 95,
700800 of the nearly 101,400 non-community water systems (transient and
nontransientnon-transient systems combined) serve 500 or fewer people.
These statistics give some insight into the
scope of
technological, economic, and managerialfinancial, managerial, and technological challenges small public water systems may
face in meeting federal drinking water regulations
and maintaining water infrastructure to ensure the delivery of safe and sufficient water supplies. (. (Figure 1 provides statistics on community
water systems, non-transient non-community water systems, and transient non-community water
systems.)
1
EPA’s long-standing policy is to exclude transient systems from drinking water regulations except for those
contaminants, such as nitrate, that the EPA believes have the potential to cause immediate adverse human health effects
resulting from short-term exposure. (Source: Environmental Protection Agency. National Primary Drinking Water
Regulation on Lead and Copper, minor revisions. January 12, 2000 (65 Federal Register 1950).)
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
systems.)
Figure 1. Public Water System Statistics
(water
(Water systems regulated under the SDWA)
Source: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Source: EPA, Fiscal Year 2011 Drinking Water and Ground Water Statistics
,
, EPA 816-R-13-003, March 2013, p. 8, http://water.epa.gov/scitech/datait/databases/drink/sdwisfed/upload/
epa816r13003.pdf
.
Notes:.
Notes: The EPA has established three broad categories of public water systems. A community water system (CWS)
serves the same population year-round. A non-transient non-community water system (NTNCWS) regularly
supplies water to at least 25 of the same people at least six months per year
, but not year-round (e.g., schools,
factories, office buildings, and hospitals that have their own
water systemswells). Transient non-community water
systems (TNCWS) provide water in places where people do not remain for long periods of time, such as gas
stations and campgrounds.
National Drinking Water Regulations
A key component of SDWA is the requirement that
the EPA promulgate national primary drinking
water regulations for contaminants that may pose health risks and
that are likely to be present in
public water supplies. Section 1412 instructs
the EPA on how to select contaminants for
regulation and specifies how the EPA must establish regulations once a contaminant has been
selected. The regulations apply to
the roughly 168,000 privately and publicly owned
water
systems"public water systems" that provide piped water for human consumption to at least 15 service connections or that
regularly serve at least 25 people. The EPA has issued regulations for more than 90 contaminants,
including regulations setting
new standardsstandards or treatment techniques for drinking water disinfectants and their byproducts
and for microbial contaminants, a regulation establishing a standard for uranium in drinking
water, and a regulation revising the standard for arsenic.
, microorganisms (e.g., Cryptosporidium and Legionella), radionuclides, organic chemicals (e.g., benzene and many pesticides), and inorganic chemicals (e.g., arsenic and lead).4
Contaminant Selection and Regulatory Schedules
Section 1412
The SDWA, as amended in 1996, directs
the EPA to select contaminants for regulatory
consideration based on occurrence, health effects, and meaningful opportunity for health risk
reduction. Starting in 1998 and then every five years, the EPA must publish a list of contaminants
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
that may warrant regulation. As of 2001, and every five years thereafter, the EPA must determine
whether or not to regulate at least five of the listed contaminants. The act requires the EPA to
evaluate contaminants that present the greatest health concern and to regulate those contaminants
that occur at concentration levels and frequencies of public health concern. The amendments also
included schedules for the EPA to complete regulations for specific contaminants (i.e., radon,
arsenic, disinfectants and disinfection byproducts and Cryptosporidium).
Standard Setting
For each contaminant that the EPA determines requires regulation, the EPA must set a
nonenforceable maximum contaminant level goal (MCLG) at a level at which no known or
anticipated adverse health effects occur and which allows an adequate margin of safety. The EPA
must then set an enforceable standard, a maximum contaminant level (MCL), as close to the
MCLG as is “feasible” using best technology, treatment techniques, or other means available
(taking costs into consideration). The agency generally sets standards based on technologies that
EPA to promulgate a drinking water regulation for a contaminant if the Administrator determines that the following three criteria are met:- The contaminant may have adverse health effects;
- It is known, or there is a substantial likelihood, that the contaminant will occur in public water systems with a frequency and at levels of public health concern; and
- Its regulation presents a meaningful opportunity for health risk reduction for persons served by public water systems.5
Every five years, EPA must publish a list of unregulated contaminants that are known or anticipated to occur in public water systems and that may require regulation (known as a contaminant candidate list).6 The SDWA further directs EPA to administer a monitoring program for unregulated contaminants to facilitate the collection of occurrence data for contaminants that are not regulated but are suspected to be present in public water supplies. Every five years, EPA must publish a list of no more than 30 unregulated contaminants to be monitored by public water systems.7 This list is based on the contaminant candidate lists as well as other data.8 Every five years, EPA is required to make a regulatory determination (whether or not to regulate) for at least five of the contaminants included on the contaminant candidate list.
Standard Setting
For each contaminant that EPA determines requires regulation, EPA must set a nonenforceable maximum contaminant level goal (MCLG) at a level at which no known or anticipated adverse health effects occur and allows an adequate margin of safety.9 EPA must then set an enforceable standard, a maximum contaminant level (MCL), as close to the MCLG as is "feasible" using best technology, treatment techniques, or other means available (taking costs into consideration). Referencing legislative history, the agency generally sets standards based on technologies that are affordable for large communities; however, as amended by P.L. 104-182, the act requires
EPA, when issuing a regulation for a contaminant, to list any technologies or other means that
comply with the MCL and
that are affordable for small public water systems serving populations
of 10,000 or fewer. If
the EPA does not identify
“compliance”"compliance" technologies that are affordable for
small systems, then
itthe agency must identify small system
“variance”"variance" technologies or other means that
may not achieve the MCL but are protective of public health.
The 1996 amendments authorized the EPA to
EPA may set a standard at other than the feasible level if the
feasible level would lead to an increase in health risks by increasing the concentration of other
contaminants or by interfering with the treatment processes used to comply with other SDWA
regulations. In such cases, the standard or treatment techniques must minimize the overall health
risk. Also, when proposing a regulation,
the EPA now EPA must publish a determination as to whether
or not the benefits of the standard justify the costs. If
the EPA determines that the benefits do not
justify the costs, the agency may, with certain exceptions, promulgate a standard that maximizes
health risk reduction benefits at a cost that is justified by the benefits.
2
10
New regulations generally become effective three years after promulgation. Up to two additional
years may be allowed if
the EPA (or a state in the case of an individual system) determines the
time is needed for capital improvements.
EPA is required to review and strengthen, as appropriate, each drinking water regulation every six years.11 (Section 1448 outlines procedures for judicial review of
EPA actions involving the establishment of SDWA regulations and other final EPA actions.)
Risk Assessment
Risk Assessment
The 1996 amendments also added risk assessment and risk communication provisions to SDWA.
When developing regulations,
the EPA is required to (1) use the best available, peer-reviewed
science and supporting studies and data; and (2) make publicly available a risk assessment
document that discusses estimated risks, uncertainties, and studies used in the assessment. When
proposing drinking water regulations,
the EPA must publish a health risk reduction and cost
analysis (HRRCA). The analysis. EPA may promulgate an interim standard without first preparing this
2
For a discussion of EPA regulation of contaminants under the revised process, see, for example, U.S. Government
Accountability Office, EPA Should Improve Implementation of Requirements on Whether to Regulate Additional
Contaminants, GAO-11-254, May 27, 2011, 146 p. http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-254.
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
benefit-cost analysis or making a determination as to whether the benefits of a regulation would
justify the costs if the Administrator determines that a contaminant presents an urgent threat to
public health.
Variances and Exemptions
In anticipation that some systems, particularly smaller ones, could have difficulty complying with
every regulation, Congress included in
the SDWA provisions for variances and exemptions. Section
1415 authorizes a state to grant a public water system a
variancevariance from a standard if raw water
quality prevents meeting the standard despite application of best technology
, and the variance
does not result in an unreasonable risk to health.
Subsection 1415(e) authorizes variances specifically for small systems, based on application of
best affordable technology. When developing a regulation, if
the EPA cannot identify a
technology that meets the standard and is affordable for small systems,
the EPA must identify
variance technologies that are affordable but do not necessarily meet the standard. In cases where
the EPA has identified variance technologies, then states may grant small system variances to
systems serving 3,300 or fewer persons if the system cannot afford to comply with a standard
(through treatment, an alternative water source, or restructuring) and the variance ensures
adequate protection of public health. A state may then grant a variance to a small system,
allowing the system to use a variance technology to comply with a regulation. With EPA
approval, states
also maymay also grant variances to systems serving between 3,301 and 10,000 persons.
Variances are not available for microbial contaminants. The EPA has determined that affordable
compliance technologies are available for all existing standards. Thus, small system variances
are not available.
Section 1416 authorizes states to grant public water systems temporary
exemptions from
exemptions from standards or treatment techniques if a system cannot comply for other compelling reasons
(including costs). An exemption is intended to give a water system more time to comply with a
regulation and can be issued only if it will not result in an unreasonable health risk. A qualified
system may receive an exemption for up to three years beyond the compliance deadline. Systems
serving 3,300 or fewer persons may receive a maximum of three additional two-year extensions
,
for a for total exemption duration of nine years.
State Primacy
State PWSS Primacy
Section 1413 authorizes states to assume primary oversight and enforcement responsibility
(primacy) for public water systems. To assume primacy, states must adopt regulations at least as
stringent as national requirements, develop adequate procedures for enforcement (including
conducting monitoring and inspections), adopt authority for administrative penalties, and
maintain records and make reports as EPA may require. States
also must must also develop a plan for
providing safe drinking water under emergency circumstances. Currently, 55 of 57 states and
territories have primacy authority for the public water system supervision (PWSS) program.
12
Under Section 1443, Congress authorized appropriations of $100 million annually for
the EPA to
make grants to states to administer the PWSS program. This section directs
the EPA, in
accordance with regulations, to allot the sums among the states
“"on the basis of population,
geographical area, number of public water systems, and other relevant factors.
” States are
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
authorized to use a portion of their drinking water state revolving fund grant (" Additionally, states may use 4% their annual DWSRF grant under Section 1452
)
to cover the costs of administering the PWSS program.
13
Enforcement, Consumer Information, and
Citizen Suits
The Safe Drinking Water Act Citizen Suits
The SDWA requires public water systems to monitor their water supplies to
ensure compliance with drinking water standards and to report monitoring results to the states.
States review monitoring data submitted by public water systems, and also conduct their own
monitoring, to determine system compliance with drinking water regulations.
The EPA monitors
public water system compliance primarily by reviewing the violation data submitted by the states.
Section 1414 requires that, whenever
the EPA finds that a public water system in a state with
primary enforcement authority does not comply with regulations, the agency must notify the state
and the system and provide assistance to bring the system into compliance. If the state fails to
commence enforcement action within 30 days after the notification,
the EPA is authorized to issue
an administrative order or commence a civil action. In a nonprimacy state,
the EPA must notify an
elected local official (if any has jurisdiction over the water system) before commencing an
enforcement action against the system.
The 1996 amendments strengthened enforcement authorities, streamlined the process for issuing
federal administrative orders, increased administrative penalty amounts, made more sections of
the act clearly subject to EPA enforcement, and required states (as a condition of primacy) to have
administrative penalty authority. The amendments also provided that no enforcement action may
be taken against a public water system that has a plan to consolidate with another system.
3
14
Consumer Information and Reports
Enforcement provisions also require public water systems to notify customers of violations of
drinking water standards or other requirements, such as monitoring and reporting requirements.
Systems must notify customers within 24 hours of any violations that have the potential to cause
serious health effects. Additionally, community water systems must mail to all customers an
annual
“"consumer confidence report
”" on contaminants detected in their drinking water. States are
required to prepare annual reports on the compliance of public water systems and to make
summaries available to
the EPA and the public;
the EPA must prepare annual national compliance
reports (§1414(c)).
3
For enforcement information and statistics, see U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Providing Safe Drinking
Water in America: 2011 National Public Water Systems Compliance Report, Office of Enforcement and Compliance
Assurance, EPA document No. 305R13002. May 16, 2011, 94 p., http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/reports/
accomplishments/sdwa/sdwacom2011.pdf.
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Citizen Suits
Section 1449 provides for citizens’ civil actions. Citizen suits may be brought against any person
or agency allegedly in violation of provisions of the act, or against the EPA Administrator for
alleged failure to perform any action or duty which is not discretionary.
Compliance Improvement Programs
The 1996 amendments added two state-administered programs aimed at improving public water
system compliance with drinking water regulations: the operator certification program and the
capacity development program. Section 1419 required states to adopt programs for training and
certifying operators of community and non-transient non-community systems (e.g., schools and
workplaces that have their own wells). The EPA is required to withhold 20% of a state’s annual
DWSRF grant, unless the state has adopted and implements an operator certification program.
Relatedly, Section 1420 required states to establish capacity development programs, also based on
EPA guidance. Congress specified that the programs must include (1) legal authority to ensure
that new systems have the technical, financial, and managerial capacity to meet SDWA
requirements; and (2) a strategy to assist existing systems that are experiencing difficulties to
come into compliance. The EPA is required to withhold a portion of SRF grants from states that
do not have capacity development strategies. The agency has not had to withhold funds under
either of these programs.
Ground Water Protection Programs
Most public water systems rely on ground water as a source of drinking water, and Part C of the
act focuses on ground water protection.4 Section 1421 authorized the establishment of state
underground injection control (UIC) programs to protect underground sources of drinking water
(USDWs). In 1977, the EPA issued mandated regulations that contained minimum requirements
for state UIC programs to prevent underground injection that endangers drinking water sources,
and that required states to prohibit any underground injection not authorized by state permit. The
law specified that the regulations could not interfere with the underground injection of brine from
oil and gas production or recovery of oil unless underground sources of drinking water would be
affected.5
Section 1422 authorized affected states to submit plans to the EPA for implementing UIC
programs and, if approved, to assume primary enforcement responsibility. If a state’s plan has not
been approved, or the state has chosen not to assume program responsibility, then the EPA must
implement the program (§1423). For oil and gas injection operations only, states with UIC
programs are delegated primary enforcement authority without meeting EPA regulations under
Section 1421, provided states demonstrate that they have an effective program that prevents
4
According to the EPA, of roughly 156,600 public water systems, 142,400 rely on ground water and 14,200 rely on
surface water. Among roughly 51,700 community water systems, 40,000 rely on ground water and 11,700 rely on
surface water.
5
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-58, §322) amended SDWA Section 1421(d) to specify that the definition of
“underground injection” excludes the injection of fluids or propping agents (other than diesel fuels) used in hydraulic
fracturing operations related to oil, gas, or geothermal production activities.
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underground injection that endangers drinking water sources (§1425, added in 1980). EPA has
delegated primacy for all classes of wells to 34 states; it shares implementation responsibility in
six states, and implements the UIC program for all well classes in 10 states.
To implement this program, EPA placed UIC wells in five classes based on similarity in the fluids
injected, and construction, injection depth, design, and operating techniques, and issued
regulations that establish performance criteria for each class.6 In 2008, the agency proposed a rule
to establish a new Class VI well for use in the underground injection of carbon dioxide. Class VI
wells would be used for the long-term geologic sequestration of carbon dioxide as a tool for
mitigating greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired power plants and other large stationary
sources of carbon dioxide.
A separate ground water protection provision, Subsection 1424(e), authorizes the EPA to make
determinations, on EPA’s initiative or upon petition, that an aquifer is the sole or principal
drinking water source for an area. In areas that overlie a designated sole-source aquifer, no federal
funding may be committed for projects that the EPA determines may contaminate such an aquifer.
Any person may petition for sole source aquifer designation. Nationwide, the EPA had designated
73 sole source aquifers.
The act contains three other state programs aimed specifically at protecting ground water. Added
in 1986, Section 1427 established procedures for demonstration programs to develop, implement,
and assess critical aquifer protection areas already designated by the Administrator as sole source
aquifers. Section 1428, also added in 1986, established an elective state program for protecting
wellhead areas around public water system wells. If a state established a wellhead protection
program by 1989, and the EPA approved the state’s program, then the EPA may award grants
covering between 50% and 90% of the costs of implementing the program. In 1996, Congress
added Section 1429, authorizing the EPA to make 50% grants to states to develop programs to
EPA must prepare annual national compliance reports.15
Citizen Suits
Section 1449 provides for citizens' civil actions. Citizen suits may be brought against any person or agency allegedly in violation of provisions of the act or against the EPA Administrator for alleged failure to perform any action or duty that is not discretionary.
Emergency Powers
Under Section 1431, the Administrator has emergency powers to issue orders and commence civil action if (1) a contaminant likely to enter a public drinking water supply system poses a substantial threat to public health, and (2) state or local officials have not taken adequate action. The Bioterrorism Act amended this section to specify that the EPA's emergency powers include the authority to act when there is a threatened or potential terrorist attack or other intentional act to disrupt the provision of safe drinking water or to impact the safety of a community's drinking water supply.
Compliance Capacity and Assistance Programs
The 1996 amendments added two state-administered programs aimed at improving public water system compliance with drinking water regulations: the operator certification program and the capacity development program. Section 1419 required states to adopt programs for training and certifying operators of community and non-transient non-community systems (e.g., schools and workplaces that have their own wells). EPA is required to withhold 20% of a state's annual DWSRF grant unless the state adopts and implements an operator certification program. Relatedly, Section 1420 required states to establish capacity development programs, also based on EPA guidance. Congress specified that the programs must include (1) legal authority to ensure that new systems have the technical, financial, and managerial capacity to meet SDWA requirements; and (2) a strategy to assist existing systems that are experiencing difficulties to come into compliance. EPA is required to withhold a portion of SRF grants from states that do not have capacity development strategies. The agency has not had to withhold funds under either of these programs.
Small System Technical Assistance
In addition to the above compliance assistance programs, the act authorizes EPA and states to provide compliance assistance to public water systems and particularly to small systems (serving from 25 to 10,000 customers). Accounting for 92% of community water systems, these small systems frequently lack both economies of scale and the financial, managerial, and technical capacity to meet SDWA requirements.
Added in 1996, Subsection 1442(e) authorizes EPA to provide technical assistance to small public water systems. In this subsection, Congress authorized appropriations of $15 million annually for FY1997 through FY2003 for EPA to provide technical assistance to small water systems through nonprofit organizations or other means. The Grassroots Rural and Small Community Water Systems Assistance Act (P.L. 114-98), enacted December 11, 2015, revises this program and extends the authorization of appropriations through FY2020.
The technical assistance is intended to enable small systems to achieve and maintain compliance with drinking water regulations and may include circuit-rider and multi-state regional technical assistance programs, training, and assistance in implementing regulations, source water protection plans, monitoring plans, water security enhancements, etc. Relatedly, SDWA Section 1452, establishing the DWSRF program, authorized another source of funding for this technical assistance. SDWA Section 1452(q) authorized EPA to reserve up to 2% of the total funds appropriated for the SRF program for each of FY1997 through FY2003 to carry out the provisions of Section 1442(e) (relating to technical assistance for small systems, not to exceed the amount authorized in Section 1442(e)).16
Ground Water Protection Programs
Underground Injection Control Programs
Most public water systems rely on ground water as a source of drinking water, and Part C of the act focuses on ground water protection.17 Section 1421 authorized the establishment of state underground injection control (UIC) programs to protect underground sources of drinking water (USDWs). In 1977, EPA issued mandated regulations that contained minimum requirements for state UIC programs to prevent underground injection that endangers drinking water sources and required states to prohibit any underground injection not authorized by state permit. The law specified that the regulations could not interfere with the underground injection of brine from oil and gas production or recovery of oil unless USDWs would be affected.18
Section 1422 authorized affected states to submit plans to EPA for implementing UIC programs and, if approved, to assume primary enforcement responsibility. If a state's plan has not been approved, or the state has chosen not to assume program responsibility, then EPA must implement the program.19 For oil and gas injection operations only, states with UIC programs are delegated primary enforcement authority without meeting EPA regulations under Section 1421, provided that states demonstrate that they have an effective program that prevents underground injection that endangers drinking water sources.20 EPA has delegated primacy for all classes of wells to 35 states; it shares implementation responsibility with seven states and two Indian tribes and implements the UIC program for all well classes in nine states.
To implement this program, EPA has established six classes of UIC wells based on similarity in the fluids injected, construction, injection depth, design, and operating techniques and issued regulations that establish performance criteria for each class.21 Most recently, EPA issued regulations for Class VI wells establishing requirements for the underground injection of carbon dioxide (CO2). Class VI well are intended to be used for the long-term geologic sequestration of CO2 as a tool for mitigating greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired power plants and other large stationary sources of carbon dioxide.
Other SDWA Groundwater Protection Programs
The act contains four other state programs aimed specifically at protecting groundwater.
1. Sole Source Aquifer Protection Program. Included in the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 (P.L. 93-523), Section 1424(e) authorizes EPA to make determinations—either on EPA's initiative or upon petition—that an aquifer is the sole or principal drinking water source for an area. In areas that overlie a designated sole-source aquifer, no federal funding may be committed for projects that EPA determines may contaminate such an aquifer.22 Any person may petition for sole source aquifer designation. Nationwide, EPA has designated 77 sole source aquifers.23
2. Sole Source Aquifer Demonstration Program. Section 1427, added in 1986, established procedures for demonstration programs to develop, implement, and assess critical aquifer protection areas already designated by the Administrator as sole source aquifers.
3. State Wellhead Protection Programs. Section 1428, also added in 1986, established an elective state program for protecting wellhead areas around public water system wells. If a state established a wellhead protection program by 1989 and EPA approved the state's program, then EPA may award grants covering between 50% and 90% of the costs of implementing the program.
4. State Groundwater Protection Grants. Section 1429, added in 1996, authorizes EPA to make 50% grants to states to develop programs to ensure coordinated and comprehensive protection of ground water within the states. For these
programs, appropriations were authorized through FY2003 as follows: $15 million per
fiscal year for
Section 1427, $30 million per
fiscal year for Section 1428, and $15 million per
fiscal year for Section 1429.
Additionally, states may use a portion of their DWSRF capitalization grant under Section 1452(k) for certain groundwater protection activities.
Source Water Assessment and Protection Programs
The 1996 amendments expanded the act
’'s pollution prevention focus to embrace protection of
surface water
, as well as ground water. Section 1453 required
the EPA to publish guidance for
states to implement source water assessment programs that delineate boundaries of the areas from
which systems receive water
, and identify the origins of
regulated contaminants (and also any contaminants selected by the state) contaminants in those areas to determine
systems’ systems' susceptibility to contamination. States with approved assessment programs may adopt
alternative monitoring requirements for water systems
, as provided for in Section 1418.
6
The wells are classified as follows: Class I (inject hazardous wastes, industrial non-hazardous liquids, or municipal
wastewater beneath the lowermost USDW); Class II (inject brines and other fluids associated with oil and gas
production, and hydrocarbons for storage); Class III (inject fluids associated with solution mining of minerals beneath
the lowermost USDW); Class IV (inject hazardous or radioactive wastes into or above USDWs and generally are
banned); Class V (all injection wells not covered under other classes—many of these wells inject non-hazardous fluids
into or above USDWs, and are typically shallow, on-site disposal systems), and Class VI (inject carbon dioxide (CO2)
for long-term geologic sequestration to reduce atmospheric emissions of CO2 from industrial sources).
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as provided for in Section 1418. Section 1452 (k)(1)(C) authorized states to use up to 10% of their DWSRF capitalization grant for FY1998 and FY1997 to delineate and assess source water protection areas.
Section 1454 authorized a source water petition program based on voluntary partnerships between
state and local governments. States may establish a program under which a community water
system or local government may submit a petition to the state requesting assistance in developing
a voluntary source water quality protection partnership to (1) reduce the presence of contaminants
in drinking water, (2) receive financial or technical assistance, and (3) develop a long-term source
water protection strategy. This section authorized $5 million each year for grants to states to
support petition programs. Also, states may use up to 10% of their DWSRF grant to support
various source water protection activities
, including the petition program.
State Revolving Funds
In 1996, Congress authorized
a drinking water state revolving loan fund (DWSRF)the DWSRF program to
help systems finance improvements needed to comply with SDWA regulations
(§1452). The EPA
.24 EPA is authorized to make grants to states to capitalize DWSRFs, which states
may then
may use to make
loans to public water systems. States must match 20% of the federal grant. Grants are allotted
based on the results of needs surveys.
725 Each state and the District of Columbia must receive at
least 1% of the appropriated funds.
Drinking water SRFs may be used to provide loans for expenditures that
the EPA has determined
will facilitate compliance or significantly further the act
’'s health protection objectives. States
must make available 15% of their annual allotment for loan assistance to systems that serve
10,000 or fewer persons
, to the extent that funds can be obligated for eligible projects. States may
use up to 30% of their DWSRF grant to provide loan subsidies (including forgiveness of
principal) to help economically disadvantaged communities. Also,
Section 1452(k) authorizes states tostates may use a portion of
funds for technical assistance, source water protection and capacity development programs, and
for operator certification.
The law authorized appropriations of $599 million for FY1994 and $1 billion per year for
FY1995 through FY2003 for DWSRF capitalization grants.
The EPA was directed to reserve,
from annual DWSRF appropriations, 0.33% for financial assistance to several
Trusts and
Territoriestrusts and territories, $10 million for health effects research on drinking water contaminants, $2 million for
the costs of monitoring for unregulated contaminants, and up to 2% for technical assistance. The
EPA may use 1.5% of funds each year for making grants to Indian
Tribestribes and Alaska Native
villages.8
Drinking Water Security
The 107th villages.26
Drinking Water Security
The 107th Congress passed the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and
Response Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-188) to address a wide range of security issues. Title IV of the
Bioterrorism Act amended
the SDWA to address threats to drinking water security. Key provisions
are summarized below.
7
See U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment: Fifth
Report to Congress, Office of Water, EPA 816-R-13-006, April 2013, 70 p., http://water.epa.gov/grants_funding/dwsrf/
upload/epa816r13006.pdf.
8
For more information, CRS Report RS22037, Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF): Program Overview
and Issues, by Mary Tiemann.
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Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Vulnerability Assessments
are summarized below.
Vulnerability Assessments
Under new SDWA Section 1433, each community water system serving more than 3,300 people
was required to conduct an assessment of the system
’'s vulnerability to terrorist attacks or other
intentional acts intended to disrupt the provision of a safe and reliable drinking water supply. This
provision established deadlines, based on system size, for community water systems to certify to
the EPA that they had conducted a vulnerability assessment and to submit to the EPA a copy of
the assessment. Section 1433 exempted the contents of the vulnerability assessments from
disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act (except for information contained in the
certification identifying the system and the date of the certification), and it provides for civil and
criminal penalties for inappropriate disclosure of information by government officials.
Section 1433 further required each of these community water systems to prepare an emergency
response plan incorporating the results of the vulnerability assessment.
The EPA was directed to
provide guidance to smaller systems on how to conduct vulnerability assessments, prepare
emergency response plans, and address threats.
Section 1433(e) authorized the appropriation of $160 million for FY2002, and such sums as may
be necessary for FY2003 through FY2005, to provide financial assistance to community water
systems to conduct vulnerability assessments
, to and prepare response plans
, and for expenses and
contracts to address basic security enhancements and significant threats.
The Bioterrorism Act also added Sections 1434 and 1435 to SDWA, directing the
EPA Administrator
to review methods by which terrorists or others could contaminate or otherwise disrupt the
provision of safe water supplies. These provisions require the EPA to review methods for
preventing, detecting, and responding to such disruptions
, and methods for providing alternative
drinking water supplies if a water system
wasis destroyed or impaired. Section 1435(e) authorized
$15 million for FY2002
, and such sums as may be necessary for FY2003 through FY2005 to
carry out Sections 1434 and 1435.
Emergency Powers
Under Section 1431, the Administrator has emergency powers to issue orders and commence civil
action if (1) a contaminant likely to enter a public drinking water supply system poses a
substantial threat to public health, and (2) state or local officials have not taken adequate action.
The Bioterrorism Act amended this section to specify that EPA’s emergency powers include the
authority to act when there is a threatened or potential terrorist attack or other intentional act to
disrupt the provision of safe drinking water or to impact the safety of a community’s drinking
water supply.
carry out Sections 1434 and 1435.
Tampering with Public Water Systems
Section 1432 provides for civil and criminal penalties against any person who tampers, attempts
to tamper, or makes a threat to tamper with a public water system. Amendments made by the
Bioterrorism Act increased criminal and civil penalties for tampering, attempting to tamper, or
making threats to tamper with public water supplies. The maximum prison sentence for tampering
increased from 5 to 20 years. The maximum prison sentence for attempting to tamper, or making
threats to tamper, increased from 3 to 10 years. The maximum fine that may be imposed for
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tampering increased from $50,000 to $1 million. The maximum fine for attempting to tamper, or
threatening to tamper, increased from $20,000 to $100,000.
Emergency Assistance
Relatedly, see "Emergency Powers" section.
Emergency Assistance
SDWA Subsection 1442(b) authorizes
the EPA to provide technical assistance and
to make grants
to states and public water systems to assist in responding to and alleviating emergency situations.
The Bioterrorism Act amended Subsection 1442(d) to authorize appropriations for such
emergency assistance of not more than $35 million for FY2002
, and such sums as may be
necessary for each fiscal year thereafter.
Congress has not appropriated funds for this purpose.
Additional SDWA Provisions
Lead-Free Plumbing
Section 1417 broadly prohibits the use of any pipe,
any pipe or plumbing fitting or fixture, solder,
or flux in the installation or repair of public water systems or plumbing in residential or
nonresidential facilities providing drinking water that is not
“"lead free
”" (as defined in the act).
This section also makes it unlawful to sell solder or flux that is not lead-free (unless it is properly
labeled)
, or pipes, plumbing fittings, or fixtures that are not lead-free, with the exception of pipes
used in manufacturing or industrial processing or other specific exceptions.
927 Added in 1986,
Section 1417(d) defined
“"lead free
”" to mean not more than 0.2% lead for solders and fluxes
, and
not more than 8% lead for pipes and pipe fittings. In 1996, Congress added Section 1417(e),
directing directing the EPA to issue regulations setting health-based performance standards limiting the amount
of lead that may leach from new plumbing fittings and fixtures unless a voluntary industry
standard was established within one year of enactment. An industry standard was established.
Enacted January 4, 2011, the Reduction of Lead in Drinking Water Act (P.L. 111-380) amended
Section 1417 to revise the SDWA definition of
“"lead free
”" and to add new exemptions from
prohibitions on the use or sale of lead pipes, plumbing, and fittings and fixtures. The act reduced
the allowable level of lead in products in contact with drinking water from 8.0% to 0.25%
(weighted average)
,1028 and exempted from the general prohibitions
“(A)
"pipes, pipe fittings,
plumbing fittings, or fixtures, including backflow preventers, that are used exclusively for
nonpotable services such as ... industrial processing, irrigation, outdoor watering or any other
uses where the water is not anticipated to be used for human consumption
”" (emphasis added); and (B) various
specified products including tub fillers, shower valves, service saddles, or water distribution main
gate valves at least 2 inches in diameter. (Italics added.)
9
42 U.S.C. 300g-6. From 1986 through January 3, 2014, “lead free” under SDWA Section 1417(d) was defined to
mean not more than 0.2% lead for solders and fluxes, and not more than 8% lead for pipes and pipe fittings. The 1996
SDWA amendments further provided that, for plumbing fittings and fixtures, “lead free” referred to plumbing fittings
and fixtures in compliance with industry standards established under Section 1417(e).
10
As amended in 2011, Section 1417(d) defines “lead free” to mean “(A) not containing more than 0.2% lead when
used with respect to solder and flux (unchanged from existing law); and (2) not more than a weighted average of 0.25%
lead when used with respect to the wetted surfaces of pipes, pipe fittings, plumbing fittings, and fixtures.” P.L. 111-380
established a formula to calculate the weighted average lead content of a pipe, pipe fitting, plumbing fitting, or fixture.
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P.L. 111-380 gate valves at least 2 inches in diameter.
P.L. 111-380 removed the reference to Section 1417(e), which required that plumbing fittings and
fixtures
“"intended by the manufacturer to dispense water for human ingestion
”" must comply with
the industry standard; rather, these products became subject to the definition of
“"lead free
”" in
Section 1417(d). The provisions of P.L. 111-380 became effective on January 4, 2014, and any
product that does not meet the 0.25% lead limit may no longer be sold or installed
, unless
exempt
it is exempt from the general prohibitions.
In October 2013, EPA announced that fire hydrants would not qualify for the exclusion for pipes,
fittings, and fixtures used exclusively for non-potable services and, thus, would be required to
meet the new lead-free standards.
1129 In December 2013, the House and Senate passed H.R. 3588
,
, the Community Fire Safety Act of 2013, to amend the SDWA to clearly exempt fire hydrants
from coverage under Section 1417. The President signed the bill into law (P.L. 113-64) on
December 20, 2013. P.L. 113-64 also directs EPA to (1) consult with the National Drinking Water
Advisory Council on potential revisions to the SDWA regulations for lead, and (2) request the
Council council to consider lead sources throughout the drinking water distribution system, including
components used to reroute water during repairs.
12
30
Research, Technical Assistance, and Training
Section 1442 authorizes
the EPA to conduct research, studies, and demonstrations related to the
causes, treatment, control, and prevention of diseases resulting from contaminants in water. The
agency is directed to provide technical assistance to the states and municipalities in administering
their public water system regulatory responsibilities. This section authorized $15 million annually
for technical assistance to small systems and Indian
Tribes,tribes and $25 million for health effects
research. (Title II of P.L. 104-182, the 1996 amendments, authorized additional appropriations for
drinking water research
, not to exceed $26.6 million annually for FY1997 through FY2003.)
Demonstration Grants
Demonstration Grants
The Administrator may make grants to develop and demonstrate new technologies for providing
safe drinking water and
to investigate health implications involved in the reclamation/reuse of
waste waters
(§1444).
.31
Records, Inspections, and Monitoring
Section 1445 states that persons subject to requirements under
the SDWA must establish and
maintain records, conduct water monitoring, and provide any information that the Administrator
may require by regulation to carry out the requirements of the act. Section 1445(b) authorizes the
Administrator or a representative, after notifying the state in writing, to enter and inspect the
property of water suppliers or other persons subject to the act
’'s requirements
, to determine
whether the person is in compliance with the act. Failure to comply with these provisions may
result in civil penalties.
11
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Summary of the Reduction of Lead in Drinking Water Act and Frequently
Asked Questions, EPA 815-S-13-001, October 2013, p. 5.
12
For more information, see CRS Report INB00006, Lead-Free Requirements for Fire Hydrants, by Mary Tiemann.
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result in civil penalties.
This section also directs
the EPA to promulgate regulations establishing the criteria for a
monitoring program for unregulated contaminants. Beginning in 1999 and every five years
thereafter,
the EPA must issue a list of not more than 30 unregulated contaminants to be
monitored by public water systems. States are permitted to develop representative monitoring
plan to assess the occurrence of unregulated contaminants in small systems, and the section
authorized $10 million to be appropriated for each of FY1999 through FY2003 to provide grants
to cover the costs of monitoring for small systems. All monitoring results are to be included in a
national drinking water occurrence data base created under the 1996 amendments.
National Drinking Water Advisory Council
The act established a National Drinking Water Advisory Council, composed of 15 members (with
at least two representing rural systems), to advise, consult, and make recommendations to the
Administrator on activities and policies derived from the act
(§1446).
Federal Agencies
.32
Federal Agencies
Any federal agency having jurisdiction over federally owned public water systems must comply
with all federal, state and local drinking water requirements as well as any underground injection
control programs. The act provides for waivers in the interest of national security
(§1447).
Assistance to Colonias13
.33
Drinking Water Assistance to Colonias34
Added in 1996, Section 1456 authorized
the EPA and other appropriate federal agencies to award
grants to Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Texas to provide assistance (not more than 50%
of project costs) to colonias where the residents are subject to a significant health risk attributable
to the lack of access to an adequate and affordable drinking water system. Congress authorized
appropriations of $25 million for each of fiscal years 1997 through 1999.
Estrogenic Substances
Section 1547 authorized the (See also "Wastewater Assistance to Colonias.")
Estrogenic Substances
Section 1457 authorized EPA to use the estrogenic substances screening program created in
the Food Quality Protection Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-170) to provide for testing of substances that
may be found in drinking water if the Administrator determines that a substantial population may
be exposed to such substances.
Drinking Water Studies
Section 1458 directed
the EPA to conduct drinking water studies involving subpopulations at
greater risk and biological mechanisms. EPA
also was was also directed to conduct studies to support
specific regulations, including those for disinfectants and disinfection byproducts and
Cryptosporidium.
13
Colonias generally are described as unincorporated communities or housing developments on the U.S. side of the
U.S.-Mexico border that lack some or all basic infrastructure including plumbing and public water and sewer.
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Selected Cryptosporidium.
Algal Toxin Risk Assessment and Management
The Drinking Water Protection Act (P.L. 114-45), enacted August 7, 2015, added Section 1459. It directs EPA to develop—and submit to Congress in 90 days—a strategic plan to assess and manage the risks associated with algal toxins in public drinking water supplies. Section 1459 requires EPA to include in the plan steps and schedules for EPA to (1) assess health risks of algal toxins in drinking water, (2) publish a list of toxins likely to pose risks and summarize their health effects, (3) determine whether to issue health advisories for listed toxins, (4) publish guidance on feasible methods to identify and measure the algal toxins in water, (5) recommend feasible treatment and source water protection options, and (6) provide technical assistance to states and water systems. The new provisions also call for the Government Accountability Office to report to Congress on federal funds expended for each of FY2010 through FY2014 to examine toxin-producing cyanobacteria and algae or address public health concerns related to harmful algal blooms.35
Selected P.L. 104-182 Provisions
Not Amending SDWA
The 104th Not Amending SDWA
The 104th Congress included a variety of drinking
-water-related provisions in the 1996 SDWA
Amendments amendments that did not amend the
Safe Drinking Water ActSDWA. Several of these provisions are
described below.
Transfer of Funds
Section 302 authorized states to transfer as much as 33% of their annual drinking water state
revolving fund grant to the Clean Water Act (CWA) SRF
, or an equivalent amount from the CWA
SRF to the DWSRF through FY2001. In several subsequent conference reports for EPA
appropriations, Congress authorized states to continue making transfers between the two funds,
and in P.L. 109-54, Congress made this authority permanent.
14
36
Grants to Alaska
Section 303 of the 1996 amendments authorized
the EPA to make grants to the
Statestate of Alaska to
pay 50% of the costs of improving sanitation for rural and Alaska Native villages. Grants are for
construction of public water and wastewater systems
, and for training and technical assistance
programs. Appropriations were authorized at $15 million for each of
fiscal years 1997 through
2000FY1997 through FY2000. (In P.L. 106-457, Congress reauthorized appropriations for these rural sanitation grants at a
level of $40 million for each of
fiscal years 2001FY2001 through
2005.)
Bottled Water
FY2005.)
Bottled Water
Section 305 revised Section 410 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to require the
Secretary of Health and Human Services to issue bottled drinking water standards for
contaminants regulated under SDWA within 180 days after
the EPA promulgates the new
standards, standards unless the Secretary determines that a standard is not necessary.
Wastewater Assistance to Colonias
Section 307 authorized EPA to make grants to colonias for wastewater treatment works.
Appropriations were authorized at $25 million for each of
fiscal years 1997 through 1999.
FY1997 through FY1999. (See also "Drinking Water Assistance to Colonias.")
Additional Infrastructure Funding
Section 401 authorized additional assistance, up to $50 million for each of
fiscal years 1997
FY1997 through
2003FY2003, for a grant program for infrastructure and watershed protection projects.
14
The Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2006, P.L. 109-54, Title II,
August 2, 2005, 119 Stat. 530, provided “That for fiscal year 2006 and thereafter, State authority under section 302(a)
of P.L. 104-182 shall remain in effect.”
Congressional Research Service
15
Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Table 2
. . U.S. Code Sections of the Safe Drinking Water Act
(Title XIV of the Public Health Service Act)
(42 U.S.C. 300f-300j-26)
42 U.S.C.
Section Title
SDWA
(as amended)
Chapter 6A
Public Health Service
Subchapter XII
Safety of Public Drinking Water Systems
Part A
Definitions
300f
Definitions
Part B
Public Water Systems
300g
Coverage
§1411
300g-1
National drinking water regulations
§1412
300g-2
State primary enforcement responsibility
§1413
300g-3
Enforcement of drinking water regulations
§1414
300g-4
Variances
§1415
300g-5
Exemptions
§1416
300g-6
Prohibitions on the use of lead pipes, solder, and flux
§1417
300g-7
Monitoring of contaminants
§1418
300g-8a
Operator certification
§1419
300g-9a
Capacity development
§1420
Part C
Protection of Underground Sources of Drinking Water
300h
Regulations for state programs
§1421
300h-1
State primary enforcement responsibility
§1422
300h-2
Enforcement of program
§1423
300h-3
Interim regulation of underground injections
§1424
300h-4
Optional demonstration by states relating to oil and natural gas
§1425
300h-5
Regulation of state programs
§1426
300h-6a
Sole source aquifer demonstration program
§1427
300h-7a
State programs to establish wellhead protection areas
§1428
300h-8a
State ground water protection grants
§1429
Part D
Emergency Powers
300i
Emergency powers
§1431
300i-1
Tampering with public water systems
§1432
300i-2a
Terrorist and other intentional acts
§1433
Congressional Research Service
§1401
16
Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
42 U.S.C.
Section Title
SDWA
(as amended)
300i-3
Contaminant prevention, detection, and response
§1434
300i-4a
Supply disruption prevention, detection and response
§1435
Part E
General Provisions
300j
Assurance of availability of adequate supplies of chemicals necessary
for treatment of water
§1441
300j-1a
Research, technical assistance, information, training of personnel
§1442
300j-2a
Grants for state programs
§1443
300j-3a
Special project grants and guaranteed loans
§1444
300j-4a
Records and inspections
§1445
300j-5
National Drinking Water Advisory Council
§1446
300j-6
Federal agencies
§1447
300j-7
Judicial reviews
§1448
300j-8
Citizen civil actions
§1449
300j-9
General provisions
§1450
300j-11
Indian Tribes
§1451
300j-12a
State revolving loan funds
§1452
300j-13
Source water quality assessment
§1453
300j-14a
Source water petition program
§1454
300j-15
Water conservation plan
§1455
300j-16a
Assistance to colonias
§1456
300j-17
Estrogenic substances screening program
§1457
300j-18a
Drinking water studies
§1458
Part F
Additional Requirements to Regulate the Safety of Drinking Water
300j-21
Definitions
§1461
300j-22
Recall of drinking water coolers with lead-lined tanks
§1462
300j-23
Drinking water coolers containing lead
§1463
300j-24
Lead contamination in school drinking water
§1464
300j-25a
Federal assistance for state programs regarding lead contamination in
school drinking water
§1465
300j-26
Certification of testing laboratories
b
Note: This table shows only the major code sections. For more detail and to determine when a section was
added, the reader should
(42 U.S.C. 300f-300j-26)
42 U.S.C.
|
Section Title
|
SDWA(as amended)
Chapter 6A
|
Public Health Service
|
Subchapter XII
|
Safety of Public Drinking Water Systems
|
Part A
|
Definitions
|
300f
|
Definitions
|
§1401
|
Part B
|
Public Water Systems
|
300g
|
Coverage
|
§1411
|
300g-1
|
National drinking water regulations
|
§1412
|
300g-2
|
State primary enforcement responsibility
|
§1413
|
300g-3
|
Enforcement of drinking water regulations
|
§1414
|
300g-4
|
Variances
|
§1415
|
300g-5
|
Exemptions
|
§1416
|
300g-6
|
Prohibitions on the use of lead pipes, solder, and flux
|
§1417
|
300g-7
|
Monitoring of contaminants
|
§1418
|
300g-8a
|
Operator certification
|
§1419
|
300g-9a
|
Capacity development
|
§1420
|
Part C
|
Protection of Underground Sources of Drinking Water
|
300h
|
Regulations for state programs
|
§1421
|
300h-1
|
State primary enforcement responsibility
|
§1422
|
300h-2
|
Enforcement of program
|
§1423
|
300h-3
|
Interim regulation of underground injections
|
§1424
|
300h-4
|
Optional demonstration by states relating to oil and natural gas
|
§1425
|
300h-5
|
Regulation of state programs
|
§1426
|
300h-6a
Sole source aquifer demonstration program
|
§1427
|
300h-7a
State programs to establish wellhead protection areas
|
§1428
|
300h-8a
State ground water protection grants
|
§1429
|
Part D
|
Emergency Powers
|
300i
|
Emergency powers
|
§1431
|
300i-1
|
Tampering with public water systems
|
§1432
|
300i-2a
Terrorist and other intentional acts
|
§1433
|
300i-3
|
Contaminant prevention, detection, and response
|
§1434
|
300i-4a
|
Supply disruption prevention, detection and response
|
§1435
|
Part E
|
General Provisions
|
300j
|
Assurance of availability of adequate supplies of chemicals necessary for treatment of water
|
§1441
|
300j-1a
Research, technical assistance, information, training of personnel
|
§1442
|
300j-2a
Grants for state programs
|
§1443
|
300j-3a
Special project grants and guaranteed loans
|
§1444
|
300j-4a
Records and inspections
|
§1445
|
300j-5
|
National Drinking Water Advisory Council
|
§1446
|
300j-6
|
Federal agencies
|
§1447
|
300j-7
|
Judicial reviews
|
§1448
|
300j-8
|
Citizen civil actions
|
§1449
|
300j-9
|
General provisions
|
§1450
|
300j-11
|
Indian tribes
|
§1451
|
300j-12a
State revolving loan funds
|
§1452
|
300j-13
|
Source water quality assessment
|
§1453
|
300j-14a
Source water petition program
|
§1454
|
300j-15
|
Water conservation plan
|
§1455
|
300j-16a
Assistance to colonias
|
§1456
|
300j-17
|
Estrogenic substances screening program
|
§1457
|
300j-18a
Drinking water studies
|
§1458
|
300j-19
|
Algal Toxin Risk Assessment and Management
|
§1459
|
Part F
|
Additional Requirements to Regulate the Safety of Drinking Water
|
300j-21
|
Definitions
|
§1461
|
300j-22
|
Recall of drinking water coolers with lead-lined tanks
|
§1462
|
300j-23
|
Drinking water coolers containing lead
|
§1463
|
300j-24
|
Lead contamination in school drinking water
|
§1464
|
300j-25a
Federal assistance for state programs regarding lead contamination in school drinking water
|
§1465
|
300j-26
|
Certification of testing laboratories
|
a
Note: This table shows only the major code sections. For more detail and to determine when a section was added, consult the official printed version of the U.S. Code
.
a.
.
a.
These sections include authorizations of appropriations.
b.
b.
This provision was added by the Lead Contamination Control Act (P.L. 100-572, §4), which did not amend
SDWA.
Congressional Research Service
17
Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA): A Summary of the Act and Its Major Requirements
Author Contact Information
Mary Tiemann
Specialist in Environmental Policy
mtiemann@crs.loc.gov, 7-5937
Congressional Research Service
18
SDWA.
Table 3. Annual Authorizations of Appropriations in the Safe Drinking Water Act, as Amended
42 U.S.C.
|
Purpose
|
Last Authorized Amount
|
Last Fiscal Year of Authorization
|
SDWA, as amended
|
300g-8(d)
|
Small public water system operator training and certification
|
$30,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1419(d)
|
300g-9(f)
|
Small public water systems technology assistance centers
|
$5,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1420(f)
|
300g-9(g)
|
Environmental finance centers
|
$1,500,000
|
FY2003
|
§1420(g)
|
300h-6(m)
|
Sole source aquifer demonstration program
|
$15,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1427(m)
|
300h-7(k)
|
State programs to establish wellhead protection areas
|
$30,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1428(k)
|
300h-8(f)
|
State groundwater protection grants
|
$15,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1429(f)
|
300i-2(e)
|
Community water system security enhancement grants
|
Such sums as may be necessary
|
FY2005
|
§1433(e)
|
300i-4(e)
|
Review of methods by which terrorists or others may disrupt or contaminate water supplies and methods to prevent, detect, and respond to such actions
|
Such sums as may be necessary
|
FY2005
|
§1435(e)
|
300j-1(d)
|
Emergency grants and technical assistance
|
Such sums as may be necessary
|
Indefinite
|
§1442(d)
|
300j-1(e)
|
Technical assistance for small system compliance
|
$15,000,000
|
FY2020
|
§1442(e)
|
300j-2(a)
|
State Public Water System Supervision program grants
|
$100,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1443(a)
|
300j-2(b)
|
State Underground Injection Control program grants
|
$15,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1443(b)
|
300j-2(d)
|
New York City Watershed Protection grants
|
$15,000,000
|
FY2010
|
§1443(d)
|
300j-3(c)
|
Special demonstration projects grants
|
$10,000,000
|
FY1977
|
§1444(c)
|
300j-4(a)
|
Monitoring program for unregulated contaminants
|
$10,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1445(a)
|
300j-12(m)
|
State Revolving Loan Fund program grants
|
$1,000,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1452(m)
|
300j-14(e)
|
State Source Water Petition program grants
|
$5,000,000
|
FY2003
|
§1454(e)
|
300j-16(e)
|
Grants to colonias for safe drinking water
|
$25,000,000
|
FY1999
|
§1456(e)
|
300j-18(c)
|
Studies on harmful contaminants in drinking water
|
$12,500,000
|
FY2003
|
§1458(c)
|
300j-18(d)
|
Waterborne disease occurrence study
|
$3,000,000
|
FY2001
|
§1458(d)
|
300j-25(c)
|
Federal assistance for state programs regarding lead contamination in school drinking water
|
$30,000,000
|
FY1991
|
§1465(c)
|
Source: Prepared by the Congressional Research Service based on a search of authorizations of appropriations in the Safe Drinking Water Act, as amended, and codified in the U.S. Code.
Notes: The 1996 amendments (P.L. 104-182) included several related authorizations of appropriations in provisions that did not amend the SDWA: (1) P.L. 104-182, Section 201, Drinking Water Research Authorization, authorized to be appropriated through FY2003 additional sums as may be necessary for drinking water research, not to exceed an annual total of $26,593,000; (2) Section 303, Grants to Alaska to Improve Sanitation in Rural and Native Villages, authorized appropriations of $15,000,000 annually from FY1997 to FY2000; and (3) Title IV, Additional Assistance for Water Infrastructure and Watersheds (§401(d)), provided an unconditional authorization of appropriations of $25,000,000 annually from FY1997 to FY2003 and a conditional authorization of appropriations of $25,000,000 annually from FY1997 to FY2003.
Author Contact Information
[author name scrubbed], Specialist in Environmental Policy
([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])
Footnotes
1.
|
For more summaries of environmental laws, see CRS Report RL30798, Environmental Laws: Summaries of Major Statutes Administered by the Environmental Protection Agency, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]. This report expands on the SDWA chapter presented in RL30798.
|
2.
|
For information on these provisions, see CRS In Focus IF00006, Lead-Free Requirements for Fire Hydrants (In Focus), by [author name scrubbed].
|
3.
|
The EPA's longstanding policy is to exclude transient systems from drinking water regulations except for those contaminants, such as nitrate, that the EPA believes have the potential to cause immediate adverse human health effects resulting from short-term exposure. (Source: EPA, National Primary Drinking Water Regulation on Lead and Copper, minor revisions. January 12, 2000 (65 Federal Register 1950).)
|
4.
|
For information on drinking water contaminant regulations and standards, see EPA, "Current Drinking Water Standards," http://water.epa.gov/lawsregs/rulesregs/sdwa/currentregulations.cfm.
|
5.
|
SDWA, §1412(b)(1)(a); 42 U.S.C. 300g-1(a)(1).
|
6.
|
Ibid., §1412(b)(1); 42 U.S.C. 300g-1(b)(1).
|
7.
|
EPA plans to promulgate a fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule in late 2016. For more information, see EPA, "Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Program," http://water.epa.gov/lawsregs/rulesregs/sdwa/ucmr/.
8.
|
All systems serving more than 10,000 people and a sample of smaller systems must monitor for the contaminants. EPA is required to cover the costs associated with "small" system monitoring (i.e., systems serving from 25 to 10,000 persons). The resulting data are added to the National Contaminant Occurrence Database.
|
9.
|
SDWA, §1412(b)(4); 42 U.S.C. 300g-1(b)(4). For carcinogens, the MCLG is generally set at zero.
|
10.
|
For a discussion of EPA regulation of contaminants under the revised process, see, for example, U.S. Government Accountability Office, EPA Should Improve Implementation of Requirements on Whether to Regulate Additional Contaminants, GAO-11-254, May 27, 2011, 146 p. http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-254.
|
11.
|
SDWA, §1412(b)(9); 42 U.S.C. 300g-1(b)(9).
|
12.
|
Neither Wyoming nor the District of Columbia has sought delegation of the PWSS program, and EPA administers the program directly in those jurisdictions.
|
13.
|
States may use up to an additional 10% of their annual grants for various purposes, including administering the PWSS program; however, states must match such expenditures dollar for dollar. States may use an additional 2% of the annual grant to provide technical assistance to public water systems serving 10,000 or fewer persons.
|
14.
|
For enforcement information and statistics, see EPA, Providing Safe Drinking Water in America: 2013 National Public Water Systems Compliance Report, Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, May 16, 2011, p. 97, http://www2.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-06/documents/sdwacom2013.pdf.
|
15.
|
SDWA, §1414(c).
|
16.
|
Over the years, the Administration has not requested money specifically to support these small system technical assistance activities, nor has EPA used the SRF reserve authority to fund them. Rather, Congress has provided funding for these purposes as national priorities in recent appropriations acts. See CRS Report R44208, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): FY2016 Appropriations, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed], under the heading National (Congressional) Priorities and "Earmarks." A similar rural water (and wastewater) circuit rider program receives funding under the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act of 1972, §306(a) (7. U.S.C. § 1926(a)(22)). See CRS Report R43718, Rural Development Provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill (P.L. 113-79), by [author name scrubbed].)
|
17.
|
EPA reports that, of roughly 152,700 public water systems, 138,053 rely on ground water and 14,576 rely on surface water. Among 51,356 community water systems, 39,624 rely on ground water and 11,721 rely on surface water. EPA, Fiscal Year 2011, Drinking Water and Ground Water Statistics, March 2013, p. 8, http://water.epa.gov/scitech/datait/databases/drink/sdwisfed/upload/epa816r13003.pdf.
|
18.
|
The Energy Policy Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-58, §322) amended SDWA Section 1421(d) to specify that the definition of "underground injection" excludes the injection of fluids or propping agents (other than diesel fuels) used in hydraulic fracturing operations related to oil, gas, or geothermal production activities.
|
19.
|
SDWA, §1423.
|
20.
|
Ibid., §1425, added in 1980.
|
21.
|
The wells are classified as follows: Class I (inject hazardous wastes, industrial non-hazardous liquids, or municipal wastewater beneath the lowermost USDW); Class II (inject brines and other fluids associated with oil and gas production and hydrocarbons for storage); Class III (inject fluids associated with solution mining of minerals beneath the lowermost USDW); Class IV (inject hazardous or radioactive wastes into or above USDWs and are generally banned); Class V (all injection wells not covered under other classes—many of these wells inject non-hazardous fluids into or above USDWs and are typically shallow, on-site disposal systems), and Class VI (inject carbon dioxide [CO2] for long-term geologic sequestration to reduce atmospheric emissions of CO2 from industrial sources).
|
22.
|
Funding authorized under other federal law can be committed for a project if the project is designed to assure that it will not contaminate the aquifer.
|
23.
|
EPA, "Sole Source Aquifer Protection Program," http://water.epa.gov/infrastructure/drinkingwater/sourcewater/protection/solesourceaquifer.cfm.
|
24.
|
SDWA, §1452.
|
25.
|
See EPA, Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment: Fifth Report to Congress, Office of Water, April 2013, p. 70, http://water.epa.gov/grants_funding/dwsrf/upload/epa816r13006.pdf.
|
26.
|
Under SDWA Section 1452(i) (42 U.S.C. §300j-12(i)), EPA may use 1.5% of the amounts appropriated annually to make grants to Indian tribes and Alaska Native villages. Since FY2010 (P.L. 111-88), Congress has authorized EPA to reserve up to 2.0% of the appropriated funds for Indian tribes and Alaska Native villages. This authority was included in P.L. 112-74 and has continued through the terms and conditions of subsequent appropriations. For more information, see CRS Report RS22037, Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF): Program Overview and Issues, by [author name scrubbed].
|
27.
|
42 U.S.C. 300g-6. From 1986 through January 3, 2014, "lead free" under SDWA Section 1417(d) was defined to mean not more than 0.2% lead for solders and fluxes and not more than 8% lead for pipes and pipe fittings. The 1996 SDWA amendments further provided that, for plumbing fittings and fixtures, "lead free" referred to plumbing fittings and fixtures in compliance with industry standards established under Section 1417(e).
|
28.
|
As amended in 2011, Section 1417(d) defines "lead free" to mean "(A) not containing more than 0.2% lead when used with respect to solder and flux (unchanged from existing law); and (2) not more than a weighted average of 0.25% lead when used with respect to the wetted surfaces of pipes, pipe fittings, plumbing fittings, and fixtures." P.L. 111-380 established a formula to calculate the weighted average lead content of a pipe, pipe fitting, plumbing fitting, or fixture.
|
29.
|
EPA, Summary of the Reduction of Lead in Drinking Water Act and Frequently Asked Questions, EPA 815-S-13-001, October 2013, p. 5.
|
30.
|
For more information, see CRS In Focus IF00006, Lead-Free Requirements for Fire Hydrants (In Focus), by [author name scrubbed]
|
31.
|
SDWA, §1444.
|
32.
|
Ibid., §1446.
|
33.
|
Ibid., §1447.
|
34.
|
Colonias are generally described as unincorporated communities or housing developments on the U.S. side of the U.S.-Mexico border that lack some or all basic infrastructure including plumbing and public water and sewer systems.
|
35.
|
For further information, see CRS In Focus IF10269, Algal Toxins in Drinking Water: EPA Health Advisories, by [author name scrubbed].
|
36.
|
The Department of the Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2006, P.L. 109-54, Title II, August 2, 2005, 119 Stat. 530, provided, "That for fiscal year 2006 and thereafter, State authority under section 302(a) of P.L. 104-182 shall remain in effect."
|