List of American Cities with the Cleanest Drinking Water

May 31 , 2017

List of American Cities with the Cleanest Drinking Water

The United States enjoys one of the most reliable and safest supplies of drinking water in the world. In 1974, Congress passed the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) to protect public health, including the regulation of public water systems.

SDWA directs the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to establish and enforce standards that public drinking water systems must follow. EPA delegates the primary enforcement responsibility for public water systems to the states, provided they meet certain requirements. Drinking water is provided to American cities by over 151,000 public water systems.

Every few years, several organizations conduct studies of drinking water quality and publish their findings. These studies are not necessarily comparable since the criteria used to analyze the water quality is different. However, the results do indicate which cities have successfully invested in water treatment and, therefore, provide water that meets or exceeds EPA standards.

Forbes List

The Forbes “Best Cities for Drinking Water” list is based on data from consumer confidence reports provided annually by community water systems and compiled by University of Cincinnati researchers. The “United States Drinking Water Quality Study Report” covers 77 metropolitan statistical areas—about 62% of the U.S. population. Rankings are based on levels of the cloudiness of water or turbidity, bacteria, haloacetic acids (a byproduct of drinking water disinfection) and lead.

 

Top-Rated Water Utilities

 

Des Moines, Iowa

Had the second lowest level of bacteria in its drinking water and ranked in the top 15 for lowest levels of lead, turbidity, and haloacetic acid.

 

Austin, Texas

Was among the top 10 metropolitan statistical areas for lowest levels of lead, turbidity, and haloacetic acid.

 

Sioux Falls, South Dakota

Ranked in the top 10 for lowest levels of turbidity and haloacetic acid.

 

Miami, Florida

Ranked in the top 25 for the low levels of bacteria, lead, turbidity, and haloacetic acid.

 

Birmingham, Alabama

Scored in the top 10 for the low amounts of bacteria and lead. Levels of turbidity and haloacetic acid were more middle of the road among the cities on the list.

 

Boise City, Idaho

Ranked in the top five for lowest levels of lead but had higher levels of haloacetic acid, bacteria, and turbidity.

 

Las Vegas, Nevada

Had one of the lowest levels of turbidity, but its level of haloacetic acid was above average among the cities on the list.

 

Tampa, Florida

Among the top 15 for its haloacetic acid and lead levels, and its bacteria level was well above average among the cities on the list.

 

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Had a low level of bacteria; however, levels of lead and haloacetic acid were about average among the cities on the list.

 

Tulsa, Oklahoma

Had low levels of bacteria and lead, but its level of haloacetic acid was well above average among those cities on the list.

Environmental Working Group (EWG) National Drinking Water Database

The EWG studies rate big city (population over 250,000) water utilities based on three factors:

  • Total number of chemicals detected since 2004

  • Percentage of chemicals found of those tested

  • Highest average level for an individual pollutant, relative to legal limits or national average amounts.

Top-Rated Water Utilities

 

Arlington, TX, Arlington Water Utilities

 

 

Providence, RI, Providence Water

 

 

Fort Worth, TX, Fort Worth Water Department

 

 

Charleston, SC, Charleston Water System

 

 

Boston, MA, Massachusetts Water Resources Authority

 

 

Honolulu, HI, Board of Water Supply (Honolulu/Windward/Pearl Harbor)

 

 

Austin, TX, Austin Water Utility

 

 

Fairfax County, VA, Fairfax Water

 

 

St. Louis, MO, the City of St. Louis Water Division

 

 

Minneapolis, MN, City of Minneapolis Water Department

 

Most of us take for granted the tap water we drink every day is safe. In fact, drinking water supplies in the United States are among the safest in the world. However, even in the U.S., drinking water can become contaminated with disease-causing agents and, therefore, requires treatment.

Municipalities generally operate two types of treatment plants: drinking water and wastewater. Both serve the purpose of cleaning water, but the output of wastewater plants are streams or rivers, and the output of drinking water plants are the city’s pipe network distribution system.

Public drinking water systems use various methods of water treatment to provide safe drinking water for their communities, a process involving chemicals and filters that remove most toxins and hazards. Today, the most common steps in water treatment used by community water treatment systems include the following:

 

 

Water Treatment Process

 

Coagulation and Flocculation

Drinking water usually originates from a freshwater lake, river, or a well. The water from these sources may contain disease-causing agents and most certainly will contain dissolved solids.

The first step of treatment is to remove the dissolved solids suspended in the water. To accelerate the settling and removal process, chemicals called coagulants are added to the water. A common coagulant is aluminum sulfate, but this varies by water treatment plant.

This chemical has a positive charge which neutralizes the negative charge of the suspended solids, like clays or silts, and allows for the particles to stick together. The solids formed, called floc, settle out of the mixture in a sedimentation basin, allowing clean water to flow out via a weir.

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Filtration

The flocculation and sedimentation process removes the larger particles in the water, but some smaller particles, as well as chemicals and bacteria, may remain. The next step is typically filtration through a sand filter, although filters of varying compositions (sand, gravel, and charcoal) and pore sizes are used to remove dissolved particles, such as dust, parasites, bacteria, viruses, and chemicals. Sand filters have been an effective method of filtration since the beginning of water treatment, and they are included in the treatment process to assure a standard level of clarity.

After passing through a sand filter, the water should meet local code requirement for water clarity—normally a turbidity of less than .3 NTU. At this point the water is clear; however, bacteria are still present.

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Disinfection

The final step in a typical water treatment process is disinfection. Approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the principal method of disinfection is the addition of either chlorine or chloramine. These chemicals kill disease-causing germs such as Salmonella, Campylobacter, Norovirus, and any other remaining parasites, bacteria, and viruses.

Various methods can be used to achieve safe levels of chlorine in drinking water. Chlorine is available as compressed elemental gas, sodium hypochlorite solution (NaOCl), or solid calcium hypochlorite (Ca(ClO)2). While the chemicals could be harmful in high doses, when added to water the dilution contains low levels that kill germs but are still safe to drink.

Chlorine reacts with organic material left in the water and may create disinfection byproducts which can result in carcinogens or other harmful chemicals. It is, therefore, added at the last step when most of the organic material has already been removed. During the distribution process, the chlorine remains actively present in the drinking water, keeping pathogens from entering the water from pipes or other contamination sources. Chlorine levels up to 4 mg/L are considered safe in drinking water.

Chloramine (mono-chloramine) is recognized as a safe disinfectant and has been used as a drinking water disinfectant alternative to chlorine in the U.S. since 1929. In 1998, an EPA survey estimated 68 million Americans were drinking water disinfected with chloramine. Studies reported no observed health effects from drinking water with chloramine levels of less than 50 mg/L. A normal level for drinking water disinfection can range from 1.0 to 4.0 mg/

 

Ozonation in Water Treatment

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Ozone is widely used for drinking water treatment because of its excellent disinfection and oxidation qualities.

Ozone is a gas comprised of three oxygen atoms, which has a greater disinfection effectiveness against bacteria and viruses than chlorination.  In addition, the oxidizing properties can also reduce the concentration of iron, manganese, and sulfur, and reduce or eliminate any taste and odor problems.

Organic particles and chemicals are eliminated through either coagulation or chemical oxidation. Ozone is unstable, and it will degrade over a timeframe ranging from a few seconds to 30 minutes, depending upon the water chemistry, pH, and temperature.

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Ozonation Process

During the process, clean, dry, air is passed through a high-voltage electric discharge (corona discharge), creating an ozone concentration of approximately 10,000 mg/L. The raw water is then passed through a venturi tube, creating a vacuum that pulls the ozone gas into the water, or the air is then bubbled up through the water being treated. The ozone reacts with metals to create insoluble metal oxides and, therefore, requires post filtration.

Ozonation Features

  • Effective over a wide pH range and reacts quickly with bacteria, viruses, and protozoans. It has stronger germicidal properties than chlorination and very strong oxidizing power with a short reaction time.

  • No chemicals are added to the water.

  • Eliminates a wide variety of inorganic, organic, and microbiological problems. Reduces or eliminates taste and odor issues.

  • Equipment and operational costs are higher than the chlorination process.

  • Provides no germicidal or disinfection residual to inhibit or prevent regrowth.

  • By-products such as brominated by-products, aldehydes, ketones, and carboxylic acids require a post-filtration system.

  • Less soluble in water compared to chlorine and, therefore, special mixing techniques are needed.

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Community Water Fluoridation

Research studies have proven the safety and benefits of fluoride. For more than 70 years, people in the United States have benefited from drinking water with fluoride, leading to better dental health. Because of its contribution to the large decline in cavities in the United States since the 1960s, the CDC named community water fluoridation one of the 10 greatest public health achievements of the 20th century. Fluoride is usually added during the last step of the water treatment process.

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Distribution

Once water has been filtered and disinfected, it is ready to be pumped into the distribution system. A constant pressure of 40 psi must be maintained to keep water from inflowing into the pipes at certain high elevation points. If water pressure drops below a certain level, the system must be flushed to reduce the risk of contamination.

Household Water Treatment

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Even though EPA regulates and sets standards for public drinking water, many Americans use a home water treatment unit to improve the taste of drinking water or to remove some contaminants that remain in the water supplied by the municipality.

Household water treatment systems include:

Filtration: Eliminates impurities from water utilizing a physical barrier, chemical, or biological process.

Water Softener: Reduces the hardness of the water using sodium or potassium ions to replace calcium and magnesium ions.

Disinfection: A physical or chemical process that deactivates or kills pathogenic microorganisms.

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Water Treatment Plant Example

All the cities that top the various lists of best drinking water share the same key characteristics: A sparkling clean water source, high-tech filtration and treatment, plus careful testing.

As an example, let’s look at the city that made the top of Forbes list of cities with the best water.

Des Moines Water Works

Des Moines Water Works has three treatment plants.

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Water Source

The main water source for the L.D. McMullen and Saylorville Water Treatment Plants is shallow groundwater collected from wells along the river. This utilizes the earth's natural filtering process through coarse sand and gravel which delivers water free from river sediment. The Fleur Drive plant draws water from either the Raccoon River or the Des Moines River.

Treatment Process

  • At the Fleur Drive plant, a pretreatment step is conducted which uses powdered carbon with the river water to reduce dissolved organic matter.

  • Ultrafiltration removes any non-dissolved particles larger than 0.01 micrometers (this includes virus, bacteria, and giardia).  

  • Water is sent through reverse osmosis (RO) filtration, which removes particles as small as 0.001 microns (this includes hardness and nitrate ions).  

  • Lime softening is next on the agenda in the treatment process, to remove hardness, germs, and bacteria. The water is then filtered through sand and gravel to remove all particles.  

  • At the Fleur plant, a fraction of water receives nitrate removal through an ion exchange process.

  • The Saylorville Water Treatment Plant uses a technology different than the two other water treatment plants. Water is pumped from collector wells to a pre-treatment step to oxidize and remove iron and manganese.  

  • Fluoride is added in the final step, to help prevent dental cavities, and chlorine to disinfect the water.

Testing

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DMWW’s laboratory performs 30 daily tests on the untreated water sources, which allow the staff to identify any necessary changes needed in the treatment process before the water enters the plant. Then 50 to 100 tests are conducted each day to ensure the highest quality water is produced.

The laboratory also conducts a progressive research program, including several research projects and studies throughout the year. Perhaps other municipalities can follow this example and test their water accordingly to ensure residents are drinking the cleanest drinking water possible.  

Final Thoughts

Contact your local water supplier and request a Consumer Confidence Report. In it, you will find a list of contaminants that have been detected in your water supply. Find out if the levels meet state and EPA drinking water standards. Most likely, you will discover that your tap water is safe for drinking!