99% of State Public Water Meets Standards
But new report finds more than 300 water systems unsafe, violate federal standards.
A recent report finds the vast majority of public water supplies are meeting standards for safe drinking water. But lawmakers and environmental advocates say more needs to be done to protect Wisconsin’s drinking water.
The 2019 annual drinking water report released Monday found more than 99 percent of the state’s 11,525 public water systems met federal standards last year under the Safe Drinking Water Act, said Steve Elmore, director of the Bureau of Drinking Water and Groundwater at the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
“It’s a testament to all the good work we do, that systems do, to maintain compliance with the drinking water standards,” Elmore said. “With that number, there’s obviously a small percentage that aren’t in compliance with the standards, and we’re working with those folks to come back into compliance as soon as possible.”
The law requires public systems to test water for more than 90 contaminants and notify people when they’ve reached unsafe levels.
Yet, environmental advocates note the state doesn’t have standards yet to test for emerging contaminants like perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, commonly known as PFAS. The drinking water report also doesn’t include data on private wells that provide water to roughly 30 percent of state residents who aren’t required to test their water supplies but are encouraged to.
One of the environmental advocates is Jennifer Giegerich, government affairs director for the Wisconsin Conservation Voters.
“So that still leaves a lot of gaps in the protection of public health when it comes to our drinking water in the state of Wisconsin,” said Giegerich.
Concern over the safety of drinking water from private wells has grown as studies have shown groundwater contaminated with nitrates or fecal matter in wells across northeastern and southwestern Wisconsin.
Giegerich said the Legislature failed to protect water quality in the last session, citing inaction by Republican leaders in the Conservation Voters’ annual conservation scorecard that tracks votes on environmental issues.
Gov. Tony Evers dubbed 2019 the “Year of Clean Drinking Water,” and a water quality task force convened by Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, held meetings throughout the year that produced more than a dozen bills. The package of legislation was introduced in January of this year to address emerging contaminants like PFAS, groundwater pollution from manure runoff and contaminated wells. Many of the bills passed the Assembly with unanimous support from both parties, but they died in the Senate.
Sen. Rob Cowles, R-Green Bay, said “everything got shut down” by the pandemic. He expects the bills will be introduced in the next legislative session.
“I’m anxious to get most of these bills going again and see how many we can get done even within the context of a diminished budget, and I am optimistic that quite a few of these can make it,” said Cowles.
Cowles added he and other lawmakers also plan to bring back legislation to address PFAS chemicals, as well as lead testing and remediation in schools. Opponents have criticized Republicans for removing $40 million from the state budget for the replacement of lead service lines, as well as failing to take up legislation that would expand monitoring and funding to address PFAS contamination. Some Republicans have said such proposals were too expensive or overstepped their authority.
The northeastern Wisconsin lawmaker’s district has dealt with groundwater contamination due to the region’s fractured bedrock and manure runoff from farms. Drinking water contamination from nitrate and other pathogens in Kewaunee County prompted the DNR to impose restrictions on manure-spreading across 15 counties.
Around 10 percent of private wells sampled in Wisconsin exceed safe levels of nitrate in groundwater — about 90 percent of which stems from agriculture, according to a separate report by the Wisconsin Groundwater Coordinating Council.
Among the package of bills introduced earlier this year was legislation that would increase funding for county conservation staff to work with farms to prevent runoff into water supplies and a grant program to help people replace or treat contaminated wells.
“I’ve called on the speaker and the Legislature to continue this task force into the next session,” said Shankland. “Our work is not done. Even if all these bills pass, the chair and I have both said this is just the beginning.”
Vos spokesperson Kit Beyer said in a statement that the package of bills introduced by the task force received broad bipartisan support.
“Unfortunately, COVID-19 caused the session to come to an abrupt end with the bills in the Senate,” Beyer said. “Similar to what has happened with previous speaker task forces, work on these important issues never ends and continues for many sessions.”
A spokesperson for Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, R-Juneau, did not immediately return a request for comment Monday.
Listen to the WPR report here.
Most Public Water Supplies In Wisconsin Meet Standards, But Safe Drinking Water Eludes Some was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.
More about the PFAS Problem
- Baldwin Announces $86 Million for Clean and Safe Drinking Water in Wisconsin Through Bipartisan Infrastructure Law - U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin - Oct 23rd, 2024
- EPA Issues Test Order for PFAS Used in Manufacturing Under National Testing Strategy - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Oct 9th, 2024
- DNR Asks Hunters Near Town Of Stella To Donate Deer Tissue Samples For PFAS Testing - Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources - Oct 3rd, 2024
- Gov. Evers, DNR Announce Nearly $460,000 In Grants Awarded To Small Public Water Systems With PFAS And Manganese Contamination - Gov. Tony Evers - Sep 24th, 2024
- State Supreme Court Agrees to Take WMC Toxic Pollution Case - Midwest Environmental Advocates - Sep 11th, 2024
- 2017 Law Resulting in Long List of Outdated DNR Water Standards - Danielle Kaeding - Sep 5th, 2024
- Murphy’s Law: Is Milorganite Making People Sick? - Bruce Murphy - Sep 4th, 2024
- Wisconsin Seeks To Match PFAS Rules To Federal Regulations - Danielle Kaeding - Aug 27th, 2024
- PFAS in Foam Far Worse Than Water in Wisconsin’s Rivers, Lakes - Danielle Kaeding - Jul 10th, 2024
- Lawmakers At Odds Over Releasing Health, PFAS Funds - Erik Gunn - Jun 6th, 2024
Read more about PFAS Problem here