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Source:
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Published Dec 22, 2006
(Washington, D.C.) Approximately 4,000
public water systems will monitor drinking water for up to 25 unregulated
chemicals to inform EPA about the frequency and levels at which these
contaminants are found in drinking water systems across the United States.
The information will help determine whether regulations are needed to
protect public health. This is the second scheduled review under the
Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 2).
`Through continuous monitoring and
research, EPA collects the information needed to make effective policy
decisions,` said EPA Assistant Administrator for Water Benjamin H.
Grumbles. `Good policy is fundamental to protecting public health and the
environment.`
EPA currently has regulations for more
than 90 contaminants. The Safe Drinking Water Act requires EPA to identify
up to 30 contaminants for monitoring every five years. The first cycle,
UCMR 1, was published in 1999 and covered 25 chemicals and one
microorganism. The new rule requires systems to monitor for contaminants
that are not regulated under existing law.
EPA selected the contaminants that will be
monitored through a process that included a review of:
· EPA`s
Contaminant Candidate List, which contains priority contaminants that are
researched to make decisions about whether regulations are needed.
The contaminants on the list are known or anticipated to occur in public
water systems. However, they are unregulated by existing
national drinking water regulations.
· Additional
contaminants of concern based on current research about occurrence and
various health-risk factors.
Costs for the five-year UCMR 2 will total
about $44.3 million. EPA will conduct and pay for the monitoring for those
water systems serving 10,000 people or fewer at a cost of $9 million.
EPA's
web page for UCMR2
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