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Water Quality
Water Quality Report
Lead and Your Drinking Water
Water Quality Report
2010 Consumers Annual Report on Water Quality
Northville Public Works Department wants you to know that your tap
water is safe to drink and that it meets or surpasses all 2010
Federal and State monitoring and reporting standards for quality and
safety. Read the full report by clicking on the link below.
2010 Water Quality Report
Lead and Your Drinking Water
Public Service Announcement
Tests of the water system in
Northville have indicated that some homes in the City of
Northville may exceed the Federal government’s limit for
lead. Subsequently, the City of Northville has begun a program
to reduce lead in drinking water.
Since much of the lead contamination of drinking
water may come from individual home plumbing systems, there is
action you can take in your home. The following offers
detailed suggestions regarding steps that can be taken to mitigate
the effects of lead in drinking water.
For further information, please call the
Northville Department of Public Works
at (248) 449-9930
Lead and Your Drinking Water
Recent water sampling carried out in
accordance with the Michigan Safe Drinking Water Act, 1976 PA 399,
as amended (Act 399) mandated procedures has shown lead
concentrations in some first draw samples to be above the lead
action level of 15 parts per billion. As required by R 325.10410 of
Act 399 administrative rules, the following must be distributed by
the City of Northville as part of a local public education program
addressing lead in drinking water. We will continue to address this
matter in consultation with staff from the Water Division, Michigan
Department of Environmental Quality. It must be emphasized that the
relative risk to public health from lead in drinking water is
believed to be minimal under normal water use conditions. Sampling
has shown that the source of elevated lead is from either building
plumbing or the service line to the building. We continue to
recommend that all customers allow water to run for several minutes
from drinking water taps prior to use in the mornings or following
six or more hours of nonuse in a building.
Some homes in this community
have elevated lead levels in their drinking water.
Lead can pose a significant
risk to your health.
Please read the following
notice for further information.
Introduction
The United States Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and the City are concerned about lead in your drinking
water. Although most homes have very low levels of lead in their
drinking water, some homes in the community have lead levels above
the EPA action level of 15 parts per billion (ppb), or 0.015
milligrams of lead per liter of water (mg/L). Under Federal law, we
are required to have a program in place to minimize lead in your
drinking water. Since 1996, the Detroit Water and Sewerage
Department has provided corrosion control treatment. The City of
Northville is now required to provide public education information.
This program includes corrosion control treatment, source water
treatment (if warranted), and public education. We are also required
to replace the portion of each lead service line that we own if the
line contributes lead concentrations of more than 15 ppb after we
have completed the comprehensive treatment program. If you have any
questions about how we are carrying out the requirements of the lead
regulation, please give us a call (see phone number listed at the
end of this brochure). This brochure explains the simple steps you
can take to protect you and your family by reducing your exposure to
lead in drinking water.
Health Effects of Lead
Lead is a common metal found throughout the
environment in lead-based paint, air, soil, household dust, food,
certain types of pottery, porcelain and pewter, and water. Lead can
pose a significant risk to your health if too much of it enters your
body. Lead builds up in the body over many years and can cause
damage to the brain, red blood cells and kidneys. The greatest risk
is to young children and pregnant women. Amounts of lead that won’t
hurt adults can slow down normal mental and physical development of
growing bodies. In addition, a child at play often comes into
contact with sources of lead contamination—like dirt and dust—that
rarely affect an adult. It is important to wash children’s hands and
toys often, and to try to make sure they only put food in their
mouths.
Lead in Drinking Water
Lead in drinking water, although rarely the
sole cause of lead poisoning, can significantly increase a person’s
total lead exposure, particularly the exposure of infants who drink
baby formulas and concentrated juices that are mixed with water. The
EPA estimates that drinking water can make up 20 percent or more of
a person’s total exposure to lead.
Lead is unusual among drinking water
contaminants in that it seldom occurs naturally in water supplies
like rivers and lakes. Lead enters drinking water primarily as a
result of the corrosion, or wearing away, of materials containing
lead in the water distribution system and household plumbing. These
materials include lead-based solder used to join copper pipe, brass
and chrome plated brass faucets, and in some cases, pipes made of
lead that connect your house to the water main (service lines). In
1986, Congress banned the use of lead solder containing greater than
0.2% lead, and restricted the lead content of faucets, pipes and
other plumbing materials to 8.0%.
When water stands in lead pipes or plumbing
systems containing lead for several hours or more, the lead may
dissolve into your drinking water. This means the first water drawn
from the tap in the morning, or later in the afternoon after
returning from work or school, can contain fairly high levels of
lead.
Steps You Can Take in the Home to Reduce
Exposure to Lead in Drinking Water
Despite our best efforts mentioned earlier to
control water corrosivity and remove lead from the water supply,
lead levels in some homes or buildings can be high. To find out
whether you need to take action in your own home, have your drinking
water tested to determine if it contains excessive concentrations of
lead. Testing the water is essential because you cannot see, taste,
or smell lead in drinking water. For more information on having your
water tested or if you wish to have a listing of local laboratories
certified for lead testing, please call Northville Department of
Public Works at (248) 449-9930.
If a water test indicates that the drinking
water drawn from a tap in your home contains lead above 15 ppb, then
you should take the following precautions:
- Let the water run from the tap before using
it for drinking or cooking any time the water in a faucet has gone
unused for more than six hours. The longer water resides in your
home’s plumbing, the more lead it may contain. Flushing the tap
means running the cold water faucet until the water gets
noticeably colder, usually about 15-30 seconds. If your house has
a lead service line to the water main, you may have to flush the
water for a longer time, perhaps one minute, before drinking.
Although toilet flushing or showering flushes water through a
portion of your home’s plumbing system, you still need to flush
the water in each faucet before using it for drinking or cooking.
Flushing tap water is a simple and inexpensive measure you can
take to protect your family’s health. It usually uses less than
one or two gallons of water and costs less than 50 cents per
month. To conserve water, fill a couple of bottles for drinking
water after flushing the tap, and whenever possible, use the first
flush water to wash the dishes or water the plants. If you live in
a high-rise building, letting the water flow before using it may
not work to lessen your risk from lead. The plumbing systems have
more, and sometimes larger pipes than smaller buildings. Ask your
landlord for help in locating the source of the lead and for
advice on reducing the lead level.
- Try not to cook with, or drink water from
the hot water tap. Hot water can dissolve more lead more quickly
than cold water. If you need hot water, draw water from the cold
tap and heat it on the stove.
- Remove loose lead solder and debris from
the plumbing materials installed in newly constructed homes, or
homes in which the plumbing has recently been replaced, by
removing the faucet strainers from all taps and running the water
from 3 to 5 minutes. Thereafter, periodically remove the strainers
and flush out any debris that has accumulated over time.
- If your copper pipes are joined with lead
solder that has been installed illegally since it was banned in
June 1988, notify the plumber who did the work and request that he
or she replaces the lead solder with lead-free solder. Lead solder
looks dull gray, and when scratched with a key, looks shiny. In
addition, notify the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality
about the violation.
- Determine whether or not the service line
that connects your home or apartment to the water main is made of
lead. The best way to determine if your service line is made of
lead is either hiring a licensed plumber to inspect the line or by
contracting the plumbing contractor who installed the line. You
can identify the plumbing contractor by checking the City’s record
of building permits which should be maintained in the files of the
local building department. A licensed plumber can at the same time
check to see if your home’s plumbing contains lead solder, lead
pipes, or pipe fittings that contain lead. The public water system
that delivers water to your home should also maintain records of
the materials located in the distribution system. If the service
line that connects your dwelling to the water main contributes
more than 15 ppb to drinking water, after our comprehensive
treatment program is in place, we are required to replace the
portion of the line we own. If the line is only partially owned by
this utility, we are required to provide the owner of the
privately-owned portion of the line with information on how to
replace the privately-owned portion of the service line, and offer
to replace that portion of the line at the owner's expense. If we
replace only the portion of the line that we own, we also are
required to notify you in advance and provide you with information
on the steps you can take to minimize exposure to any temporary
increase in lead levels that may result from the partial
replacement, to take a follow-up sample at our expense from the
line within 72 hours after the partial replacement, and to mail or
otherwise provide you with the results of that sample within three
business days of receiving the results. Acceptable replacement
alternatives include copper, steel, iron, and plastic pipes.
- Have an electrician check your wiring. If
grounding wires from the electrical system are attached to your
pipes, corrosion may be greater. Check with a licensed electrician
or your local electrical code to determine if your wiring can be
grounded elsewhere. DO NOT attempt to change the wiring yourself
because improper grounding can cause electrical shock and fire
hazards.
The steps described above will reduce the lead
concentrations in your drinking water. However, if a water test
indicates that the drinking water coming from your tap contains lead
concentrations in excess of 15 ppb after flushing, or after we have
completed our actions to minimize lead levels, then you may want to
take the following additional measures.
- Purchase or lease a home treatment device.
Home treatment devices are limited in that each unit treats only
the water that flows from the faucet to which it is connected, and
all of the devices require periodic maintenance and replacement.
Devices such as reverse osmosis systems or distillers can
effectively remove lead from your drinking water. Some activated
carbon filters may reduce lead levels at the tap; however, all
lead reduction claims should be investigated. Be sure to check the
actual performance of a specific home treatment device before and
after installing the unit.
- Purchase bottled water for drinking and
cooking.
You can consult a variety of sources for
additional information. Your family doctor or pediatrician can
perform a blood test for lead and provide you with information about
the health effects of lead. State and local government agencies that
can be contacted include:
Northville’s Department of Public Works can
provide you with information about Northville’s water supply.
Local laboratories that have been certified by EPA for testing
water quality are: Clayton Group Services at (248) 344-1770 and
Quantum Laboratories Inc. at (248) 348-8378.
Northville’s Building Department can provide
you with information about building permit records that may
contain the names of plumbing contractors that plumbed your home;
and
The Michigan Department of Environmental
Quality at (586) 753-3700 or the Oakland County Health Division at
(248) 858-1280, or Wayne County Health Department at (734)
727-7000 can provide you with information about the health effects
of lead and how you can have your child’s blood tested.
For further information, please call the
Northville Department of Public Works at (248) 449-9930.

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