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EWG INVESTIGATION

 

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EWG Statement, 03/10/2008

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Tap Water Quality Report

The State of Michigan

1,446 Water Systems
Serving 7,248,674 People

An Environmental Working Group analysis of tap water tests from 1998 through 2003 for 1,446 communities across Michigan shows 69 pollutants were found in drinking water across the state.

 

Pollution Summary

69Total Contaminants Detected (1998 - 2003)
15Agricultural Pollutants
(pesticides, fertilizer, factory farms)

Ammonia, Nitrate, Nitrite, Sulfate, Thallium (total), Dalapon, Simazine, Picloram, Dinoseb, Metolachlor, Atrazine, Alachlor (Lasso), 2,4,5-TP (Silvex), m-Dichlorobenzene, Ethylbenzene

15Sprawl and Urban Pollutants
(road runoff, lawn pesticides, human waste)

Ammonia, Arsenic (total), Cadmium (total), Copper, Lead (total), Mercury (total inorganic), Nitrate, Nitrite, Antimony (total), MTBE, sec-Butylbenzene, Xylenes (total), Tetrachloroethylene, Benzene, o-Xylene

47Industrial Pollutants

Aluminum, Ammonia, Arsenic (total), Barium (total), Cadmium (total), Chromium (total), Lead (total), Manganese, Mercury (total inorganic), Nitrate, Nitrite, Selenium (total), Sulfate, Antimony (total), Beryllium (total), Thallium (total), p-Isopropyltoluene, Dichlorodifluoromethane, Methyl ethyl ketone, Methyl isobutyl ketone, MTBE, cis-1,2-Dichloroethylene, 1,2,4-Trimethylbenzene, 1,3,5-Trimethylbenzene, sec-Butylbenzene, Bromochloromethane, Xylenes (total), Dichloromethane (methylene chloride), m-Dichlorobenzene, o-Dichlorobenzene, p-Dichlorobenzene, Vinyl chloride, 1,1-Dichloroethylene, 1,1-Dichloroethane, 1,2-Dichloroethane, 1,1,1-Trichloroethane, Carbon tetrachloride, Trichloroethylene, Tetrachloroethylene, Monochlorobenzene (Chlorobenzene), Benzene, Toluene, Ethylbenzene, Styrene, o-Xylene, Combined Uranium (mg/L), Uranium-235

18Water Treatment and Distribution Byproducts
(pipes and fixtures, treatment chemicals and byproducts)

Cadmium (total), Methyl ethyl ketone, Dibromomethane, Bromochloromethane, Monochloroacetic acid, Dichloroacetic acid, Trichloroacetic acid, Monobromoacetic acid, Dibromoacetic acid, Bromochloroacetic acid, Total haloacetic acids, Chloroform, Bromoform, Bromodichloromethane, Dibromochloromethane, Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs), m-Dichlorobenzene, Vinyl chloride

14Naturally Occurring
(naturally present but increased for lands denuded by sprawl, agriculture, or industrial development)

Aluminum, Ammonia, Arsenic (total), Chromium (total), Copper, Lead (total), Manganese, Mercury (total inorganic), Nitrate, Nitrite, Selenium (total), Sulfate, Combined Uranium (mg/L), Uranium-235

15Unregulated Contaminants
EPA has not established a maximum legal limit in tapwater for these contaminants

Ammonia, p-Isopropyltoluene, Metolachlor, Dichlorodifluoromethane, Methyl ethyl ketone, Methyl isobutyl ketone, MTBE, Dibromomethane, 1,2,4-Trimethylbenzene, 1,3,5-Trimethylbenzene, sec-Butylbenzene, Bromochloromethane, Bromochloroacetic acid, m-Dichlorobenzene, 1,1-Dichloroethane


6931
155
159
4721
1811
148
Total pollutantsAgricultural pollutantsSprawl and Urban pollutantsIndustrial pollutantsWater Treatment and Distribution ByproductsNaturally occurring pollutants
Number of pollutants detected (1998 - 2003) Over health based limits

NOTE: Health based limits included in this analysis include enforceable drinking water limits (called Maximum Contaminant Limits, or MCLs) as well as governmental, non-enforceable health guidelines, such as Maximum Contaminant Limit Goals (MCLGs), lifetime health advisory levels, one-day and ten-day advisory levels to protect children from non-cancer health endpoints, and other government-established health guidelines for tap water contaminants.

 

Health Summary

The federal government has set standards for 80 chemical pollutants in tap water, balancing health concerns and treatment costs.

Contaminants found in state tap water (1998-2003): 69

Total population exposed above health-based limits: 3,739,304

Communities served water with contaminants above health-based limits: 1,079

Health effects or target organs of contaminants found: Cardiovascular or Blood Toxicity, Cancer, Developmental Toxicity, Endocrine Toxicity, Immunotoxicity, Kidney Toxicity, Gastrointestinal or Liver Toxicity, Neurotoxicity, Reproductive Toxicity, Respiratory Toxicity, and Skin Sensitivity.

[View Details]

Contaminants found above health based limits: 31

RankContaminant NamePopulation Exposed (of 7,248,674 Total)Number of Water Systems (of 1,446) Total
At Any LevelAbove Health Limits
See Note
With DetectedAbove Health Limits
See Note
1Sulfate3,913,712011520
Substance from natural deposits, industrial processes, and agriculture 
2Barium (total)3,326,7451,04110765
Mineral from drilling and mining waste runoff; erosion of natrual deposits 
3Arsenic (total)3,136,4143,136,414979979
Metal that enters water by erosion of natural deposits, runoff from glass and electronics processing 
4Nitrate3,690,5616,30195812
Chemical that enters water from fertilizer runoff, leaching septic tanks, and erosion of natural deposits 
5Lead (total)2,743,6001,066,57989190
Metal that enters water by corrosion of household plumbing systems; industrial pollutant; erosion of natural deposits 
6Copper2,552,386108,86174963
contaminant that enters water by corrosion of household plumbing systems; erosion of natural deposits 
7Nitrite1,815,2291137071
Chemical that enters water from fertilizer runoff, leaching septic tanks, and erosion of natural deposits 
8Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs)3,164,8442,400,009373117
Measure of four disinfection by-products 
9Chloroform3,141,3422,280,348361100
Disinfection by-product 
10Manganese932,757456,06128581
element from natural deposits as well as industrial use 

View Full Table

NOTE: Health based limits included in this analysis include enforceable drinking water limits (called Maximum Contaminant Limits, or MCLs) as well as governmental, non-enforceable health guidelines, such as Maximum Contaminant Limit Goals (MCLGs), lifetime health advisory levels, one-day and ten-day advisory levels to protect children from non-cancer health endpoints, and other government-established health guidelines for tap water contaminants.

 

Testing Summary

The federal government has set standards for some of the pollutants found in tap water supplies.

Contaminants reported as tested by water suppliers in Michigan 163
 Contaminants tested due to federal law: 79
 Contaminants tested in addition to those required by federal law: 84

[View Details]

 

Violations Summary

According to EPA, in 2003 6% of America's public water systems reported one or more violations of a health-based drinking water standard, and 26% reported significant violations of either monitoring and reporting requirements or health-based standards.

Reported violations (1998 - 2003): 1,777

Number of MI systems with violations: 779 (53.9%)

[View Details]

Information on violations is drawn directly from EPA's national violations database in the Agency's Safe Drinking Water Information System. Analyses by others have raised questions about the quality of the information in EPA's database. For the purposes of this investigation, EWG is not showing below or including in our analyses, those violations for individual water suppliers that occurred on days for which the total number of violations assigned by EPA to that water supplier was greater than 20. This criteria was based on common characteristics of incorrect violations data as identified by water utilities, from a review of EPA's violations data by several hundred utilities prior to the release of EWG's investigation.