As a Civil Engineer in Australia who has worked with town
water supplies, I find the stories I hear about water quality amazing.
The issue of lead in the water is mind boggling.
You may find this information interesting and the source website even more so.
I am keen to hear feedback.
From
USA water quality plans
National Association of Water Companies (NAWC) new five principles for advancing water equity with 5 Water Equity Principles
The principles, are summarized as follows:
Everyone
should have access to water that is safe, reliable and affordable.
NAWC members are committed to achieving water equity, which means that everyone should have access to safe, reliable and affordable drinking water. As a nation, we must advance water equity to ensure customers of all income levels have access to high-quality water.
Focus on the customer. For NAWC’s water utilities, the customer is the top priority.
NAWC members have a customer-first mentality and demonstrate a long-standing commitment to water equity by creating a variety of customer assistance and conservation programs to help customers who struggle to pay their bills.
Never compromise on providing safe and reliable water. It is not
enough to be low cost.
Water must also be high quality and there when you need it.
Invest in communities. The 10 largest NAWC member companies invest nearly $3.7 billion in their water systems annually.
These investments keep rates stable and quality high. NAWC’s utilities strive to lift up communities where we live, work and serve by investing in those communities to create long-lasting positive change and promote public health.
Develop partnerships and encourage water system consolidation.
The drinking water sector is extremely fragmented, with over 50,000 water systems across the US.
More than 90% of systems serve fewer than 10,000 people and half serve fewer than 500 people.
Water system fragmentation increases costs and often decreases water quality, perpetuating environmental injustice and causing disproportionate harm to low-income communities.
This all sounds like a motherhood statement, something which will look good but never happen