EPA Orders Six Drinking Water Suppliers to Comply with Requirements of America’s Water Infrastructure Act
CHICAGO (June 5, 2023) – U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has issued orders to Millstone Water District in Grantsburg, Illinois, and drinking water systems in Broadview, Burnham and Glenwood, Illinois, and in Andover and Brilliant, Ohio, for failing to meet requirements under America’s Water Infrastructure Act of 2018. EPA took action to ensure all six systems certify their risk assessments and emergency response plans.
A risk and resilience assessment evaluates the vulnerabilities, threats, and consequences from potential hazards to drinking water systems. An emergency response plan describes strategies, resources, plans, and procedures that systems can use to prepare for and respond to an incident, natural or man-made, that threatens life, property, or the environment. Incidents can range from localized flooding or hacking of cybersecurity systems to large scale hurricanes, earthquakes, or terrorist attacks, among other examples.
Under AWIA, any drinking water system which serves more than 3,300 people must develop or update a risk and resilience assessment and an emergency response plan. The law also establishes deadlines for certifying completion to EPA. Nationwide, more than 95 % of water systems have complied with the requirements under AWIA.
EPA is ordering each system to submit a detailed compliance plan within 30 days for review and approval.
EPA continues to work with drinking water systems to ensure that they are compliant. EPA previously issued orders to drinking water systems in Caro and Worth Township, Michigan, and in Lansing, Maywood, Bellwood, Justice, Millstadt, Harrisburg, Brownstown and Bridgeport, Illinois, and the University of Illinois in Champaign. University of Illinois submitted a compliance plan; the other ten orders were terminated after the systems returned to compliance.
More information on AWIA requirements is available on EPA’s website.