Each year by July 1st, you should receive a short report (called a consumer confidence report or drinking water quality report) in the mail from your public water supplier that tells you two main things: where your water comes from and what’s in it. It’s an annual water quality report that a community water system is required to provide to its customers each year. The report lists the regulated contaminants found in your drinking water, as well as health effects information related to any violations of the drinking water standards.
If you’ve looked at these reports in the past, have you ever felt like there was information that wasn’t in them that you wished there was? Or you wished you could read the report online instead of in print? How could these reports be more valuable to you?
EPA will be holding an online public meeting on Thursday, February 23, 2012, to get your thoughts on these reports. EPA periodically reviews its existing regulations, and is right now seeking public input on the consumer confidence report rule.
Topics on the agenda include:
- electronic delivery of the reports,
- resource implications for implementing report delivery certification,
- use of reports to meet public notification requirements,
- how contaminant levels are reported in the consumer confidence reports,
- and more!
YOU are invited to participate in this information exchange on the consumer confidence report rule and make your voice heard!
To participate in this listening session, you can register here. Can’t participate in the live meeting? You can also join the web dialogue discussions community. You can share and post comments on the dialogue in this online forum from February 23, 2012, to March 9, 2012.
For more information, please email CCRRetrospectiveReview@epa.gov.
Drinking water and wastewater systems account for approximately 3% of energy use in the United States, and are typically the largest energy consumers in communities, sometimes accounting for 30% of total energy consumed. Energy as a percentage of operating costs for drinking water systems can reach as high as 40% and is expected to rise in the coming decades. So you may want to give your neighborhood wastewater treatment plant a heads-up about a way it can save money and save energy.
EPA and the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection are sponsoring an Energy Roundtable Conference in Harrisburg, PA. This event is for wastewater treatment operators interested in reducing their facilities’ energy costs and ultimately carbon footprint, and will highlight several areas related to energy efficiency. This innovative and collaboration-oriented event will start with a primer on Understanding Your Energy Bill, followed by a Discussion of Tools to Assess Energy Use, Energy Audits, and Available Funding Sources. This conference is not your run-of-the-mill lecture – no, we want to hear from real, live wastewater treatment operators and help others learn from success stories at saving energy and reducing costs! This event will be an open discussion roundtable. If you are an operator and would like to be involved in the Roundtable as a “Champion” of energy efficiency or as a Mentor, please send an email to the contact below.
Here are the essential details:
May 8, 2012
Penn State University– HARRISBURG CAMPUS
Science & Tech Building – Room 128
777 West Harrisburg Pike
Middletown, Pa.
For more information on energy efficiency, please visit our website. For information about this event, please contact Walter Higgins at Higgins.walter@epa.gov, or by phone at 215-814-5476. We hope to see your water treatment operatorthere!

Do you, like many other Americans, look into your medicine cabinet and see bottles of unused prescription medicines and over-the-counter drugs? Being in the bathroom with a sink and toilet readily available, your first thought may be to simply flush or dispose of them down the drain. Yes, pills are water soluble, but this solution may have negative outcomes.
When flushed and drained, it’s possible for pharmaceuticals to get into our streams, rivers and lakes. This is because drugs, including antibiotics, hormones, contraceptives and steroids are not always removed completely at waste water treatment facilities. Continued exposure to low levels of pharmaceuticals in our water systems may alter the behavior and physiology of the fish and other aquatic organisms who call it home. EPA has been working with other federal agencies and state and local government partners to better understand the implications low levels of pharmaceuticals in water, the potential effects on aquatic organisms and if there is an impact on human health.
Though flushing and draining is not the only way pharmaceuticals enter our wastewater, it’s one we can do something about.
April 28, 2012 is the next National Prescription Drug Take Back Day issued by the Drug Enforcement Administration. During this time you can drop off your unwanted drugs at many participating municipal locations, where they will be disposed of safely and properly. The last event collected over 188.5 tons of unwanted or expired medications at the 5,327 take-back sites that were available in all 50 states.
But you don’t have to wait until April to dispose of your old meds. You can contact your city or county government’s household trash and recycling service to find if there are drop off locations in your area. If all else fails, you can dispose of drugs in your household trash by following a few simple steps.
How do you dispose of your unwanted pharmaceuticals? Have you participated in any take back programs? Do you have any suggestions of how to improve programs like these? Let us know!
For those who many not have the opportunity, or the ability to surf the big waves, there is an EPA website that allows you to do a slightly different type of surfing. The website gives you the tools you need to easily Surf Your Watershed!
Find your nearby watershed by using the simple form located on the page. Once you locate your watershed, there are many links filled with information for you to search. For example, I searched the Wissahickon Creek that I bike and hike near on the weekends. Then I followed the first link, “Citizen-based Groups at Work in this Watershed,” and found out that there were 36 different organizations that are working to protect its water quality. Now I can contact one of these groups to find out about cleanups, monitoring activities, restoration projects and other activities! This was only one example of the thousands of surfable watersheds in the country. You can surf until your legs…well, hand… gets tired! And there’s no risk of getting water up your nose or embarrassing yourself in front of a beach full of people.
Tell us what you find when you Surf YOUR Watershed!
The Maryland Transit Administration is testing a “Green Track” concept, establishing vegetation between and adjacent to light rail tracks. Among the positive outcomes is a reduction in polluted stormwater running into local streams.
The question is: will the turf grass and/or sedums planted between the tracks survive in the railway environment and become established well enough to present a dense and attractive growth in Maryland? If so, green tracks are to be considered for incorporation into portions of the Red Line, a 14-mile light rail transit line proposed in Baltimore City. Additionally, the Green Track concept is being considered for portions of the Purple Line, a 16-mile light rail project in Prince George’s and Montgomery Counties. (Read more about green initiatives proposed in, “Design Green! Best Practices for Sustainability, Safe Street Design for the Red Line.”)
Green tracks are not uncommon in Europe, most notably in France and Germany. The benefits are many. Some stormwater that would otherwise run off will be captured by the vegetation and soil. The temperature in the immediate area will be moderated, being a little cooler in the summer, reducing the urban heat island effect. And, the noise from the trains will be dampened. Regular monitoring of Maryland’s Green Tracks test areas is currently underway.
Interested in seeing the green track test segments in person?
In mid-town Baltimore go to the Cultural Center Light Rail Station which is near the intersection of North Howard and West Preston Streets. There are two test areas here.
There is another test area in the suburbs near the Ferndale Light Rail Station in Anne Arundel County. The test area is located between South Broadview Boulevard and Baltimore Annapolis Boulevard south of the station and the firehouse.
Do you have an idea that could restore urban waters but you need funding? This could be your opportunity.
EPA recently announced it will provide up to $1.8 million for projects across the country to protect Americans’ health and restoring urban waters, by improving water quality and revitalizing communities.
The funding is part of EPA’s Urban Waters program which helps communities access, improve and benefit from their urban waters. Urban waters are canals, rivers, lakes, wetlands, aquifers, estuaries, bays and oceans. Examples of projects eligible for funding include:
· training for water quality improvement or green infrastructure jobs,
· educating about ways to reduce water pollution,
· monitoring local water quality,
· engaging diverse stakeholders to develop local watershed plans, or
· promoting local water quality and community revitalization goals.
A web-based seminar on this funding opportunity will be held on January 5, 2012. Proposals must be received by EPA by January 23, 2012. Awards are expected to be made in the summer of 2012. More information about these urban waters small grants and registration for the webinars is available on our national website.

The new year is soon here. What opportunities await us as we turn the calendar? If you’re a student leading a school group or participating in a class project to study and protect the Schuylkill River, the new year brings an opportunity to show off your project to a regional audience.
Nominations are now open for the 8th annual Schuylkill Action Network Drinking Water Scholastic Awards, and qualifying for consideration is easy! All you have to do is lead or participate in a classroom lesson or outdoor project that improves the water quality of the Schuylkill River, a source of drinking water for approximately 1.5 million people. Previous winning projects include building a campus rain garden, planting trees near a creek, and creating and filming short public service announcements about keeping our rivers clean.
Students in kindergarten through college are eligible for a prize, but only if you enter by March 2, 2012 in one of four age categories (elementary, middle, high school and college). Teachers, students, parents and community members can nominate a class, an individual college student or a campus club!
The Schuylkill Action Network (SAN) is a collaboration of more than one hundred organizations and individuals, including EPA Region 3, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, the Philadelphia Water Department, the Delaware River Basin Commission, and the Partnership for the Delaware Estuary. The goal of the SAN is to improve the water resources of the Schuylkill River watershed.
To learn more about the annual awards, including nomination criteria, or to nominate your class or student leader online, visit: http://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/event?llr=v6qlnbcab&oeidk=a07e5425qmq59cca5d3
Remember, the deadline for nominations is March 2, 2012.
In the meantime, share your comments below about what you do to keep the Schuylkill River clean.
There’s a new look to EPA’s Chesapeake Bay “pollution diet” website.
The pollution diet, or Chesapeake Bay Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL), was established by EPA in December 2010, based largely on action plans provided by the watershed’s six states and the District of Columbia.
The website now has a greater focus on activities at the local level happening around the 64,000-square-mile Bay watershed to reduce pollution impacting the Bay and its vast network of connecting rivers and streams.
One of the new additions is a brochure produced by the Chesapeake Bay Program’s Local Government Advisory Committee featuring examples of local actions to cut nitrogen, phosphorus and sediment pollution.
Check out those case studies and the other new items on the site, and let us know what you think.
The most ‘app’ealing entries in EPA’s Apps for the Environment challenge have been announced.
We gave you a heads up about the challenge in a blog post earlier this year. Click here to read it.
The challenge encouraged new and innovative uses of EPA’s data to create apps that address environmental and public health issues. Developers from across the country created apps with information on a variety of topics, including water protection. A few even developed games to help people learn environmental facts.
Click this link for information about the winning entries and other submissions. http://appsfortheenvironment.challenge.gov/submissions
If you’re like most Americans, you may have some expired or unused medicines sitting in your house and you’re not sure what to do with them.
The Drug Enforcement Administration knows this is a big problem. That’s why the DEA is hosting a National Drug Take Back Day on Saturday, October 29, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at many different municipal locations. Last year, nearly 4,000 local agencies participated in the event and collected over 309 tons of pills.
So what does this have to do with Healthy Waters?
Prescription and over-the-counter drugs poured down the drain or flushed down the toilet can pass through wastewater treatment plants and enter rivers and lakes, which may serve as sources downstream for community drinking water supplies. In homes that use septic tanks, medicines flushed down the toilet can leach into the ground and seep into ground water.
In addition to the National Drug Take Back Day, check with your municipal or county government’s household trash and recycling service to see if there are other drug take-back programs available in your community.
Click here to learn more about the National Drug Take Back Day and find take back locations. Also click here to get EPA tips on how to dispose of your medicine.
Here are the essential details:



