Drinking Water in New England
Preventing Contamination of Drinking Water Resources
We
must all work to prevent contamination of drinking water.
Many pollutants are put into the ground and into lakes,
rivers and streams every day. The disposal of wastes
into ground and surface waters can cause contamination
of water that we use for drinking and that we expect
to be of excellent quality. It takes many years and
it is very costly to remove contamination affecting
water supplies. Often the damage is irreparable and
the water resource can never be used as a drinking water
source again. Preventing pollution of drinking water
sources is our chance to assure the availability of
future drinking water supplies. A protected source of
drinking water source, combined with proper water quality
monitoring, treatment, maintenance and distribution,
is necessary to provide safe, affordable drinking water
to residents, businesses, and visitors in New England.
| To report an oil spill or chemical release call the National Response Center at (800) 424-8802 |
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has primary responsibility for ensuring the activities required by the Safe Drinking Water Act, and many other environmental laws, are carried out. EPA oversees several programs aimed at protecting drinking water resources:
- Ground Water Discharges (Underground Injection Control Program
- Source Water Assessment Program
- Wellhead Protection Program
- Sole Source Aquifer Program
- Road Salt & Sand: What You Should Know About Safe Winter Roads and the Environment (PDF) (2 pp, 135K, about PDF)
EPA works closely with state drinking water programs to carry out its drinking water protection programs. In addition, many other organizations assist EPA and the states to protect our region's drinking water sources.
In an effort to educate New England citizens and businesses about the value of their drinking water and how to protect it against contamination, EPA is working with other organizations to help communities and water suppliers develop protection programs, technical assistance documents and videos, classroom materials for schools and a business honors program for drinking water source protection. EPA has developed many outreach documents and videos which may be used to educate people about drinking water. Many of these documents are available from EPA's national website. Others may be available by contacting the Drinking Water Hotline at 1-800-426-4791.
At
the request of teachers for additional classroom activities
related to ground water, the EPA Region 1, NE Office
provided grants to the New England Interstate Water
Pollution Control Commission to develop classroom activity
books for grades K-6 and 7-12, entitled "That Magnificent
Ground Water Connection". Examples of the classroom
activities are available, click here.
