Water Quality
Rivers, Lakes, and Estuaries Water of Long Island Sound Warming and Rising Waters Swimming
Drinking Water
Drinking water quality in 2021 was very good, but chloride was again the most common contaminant detected in public water systems.
This indicator shows that 99.86 percent of the time, the population served by Community Water systems and Non-Transient Non-Community Water systems demonstrated full compliance with applicable standards, after weighting the reports to account for the number of people served by each system. Though long-term problems occur, they are rare in large systems.
Data for 2021 show no increase in the number of violations, based on the number of people served, from 2020 levels.41 By far, the most common problem during 2021 in water systems was excessive levels of chloride, which is typical of most years. In addition, the Connecticut Department of Public Health (DPH) oversees the monitoring for lead by public water supplies, and also requires public water to be tested for corrosive properties (including pH) that might result in lead contamination.
A 2019 report by the Auditors of Public Accounts for calendar year 2017 recommended that the DPH strengthen oversight and enforcement drinking water laws. A 2020 update indicated that DPH implemented seven of the Auditor’s recommendations, and was still working on addressing the other ten recommendations identified in the 2019 Audit Report.
About 80 percent of people in Connecticut are supplied by the public water systems included in the chart above. The remainder of the population relies on private wells, which are not monitored by any government agency and are not counted in this indicator. An unknown but significant number of private wells are contaminated by pollution or naturally occurring toxins, such as arsenic and uranium. A recent United State Geological Survey study of groundwater samples collected from more than 2,000 private wells in bedrock aquifers in Connecticut found that 3.9 percent of collected samples contained arsenic concentrations greater than the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) maximum contaminant level (MCL) of 10 micrograms per liter (µg/L), and 4.7 percent of collected samples contained uranium concentrations greater than the EPA MCL of 30 µg/L.42 The DPH provides guidelines for testing of private wells.
Goal: It is assumed that the goal is for everyone to have safe drinking water.
Technical Notes: *The vertical axis in the chart above has been shortened, beginning at 97 percent rather than the customary zero. This allows the reader to see year-to-year differences, which would be nearly imperceptible if the chart began at zero.
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41Department of Public Health (DPH), Drinking Water Section; personal communication from S. Patel, February 24, 2022.
42 United States Geological Survey, “Arsenic and Uranium Occurrence in Private Wells in Connecticut, 2013–18— A Spatially Weighted and Bedrock Geology Assessment”; Eliza L. Gross and Craig J. Brown, Open-File Report 2021–1111. Version 1.1, November 2020. pubs.usgs.gov/of/2021/1111/ofr20211111.pdf.