Last week all 81 well owners who participated in the 2021
Prince William County Well Water Clinic received their results by email. After a little hiccup for a data transposition error (nitrate and floride were transposed). If you received a report make sure you are looking at the corrected report. Above
you can see the summary of what was found in the 81 wells tested. What VA Tech tested
for were mostly the naturally occurring contaminants and common sources of
contamination: a poorly sealed well or a nearby leaking septic system, or
indications of plumbing system corrosion. These are the most common
contaminants that effect drinking water wells.
To determine if treatment is necessary, water test results
should be compared to a standard. The standard used was the U.S.EPA Safe
Drinking Water Act (SDW) limits. Though private wells do not fall under the
regulatory authority of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) or the
Safe Drinking Water Act, the SDW act has primary and secondary drinking water
standards that we use for comparison. Primary standards are ones that can
impact health and from the tested substances include coliform bacteria, E. coli
bacteria, nitrate, lead, and arsenic. Secondary standards impact taste or the
perceived quality of the water.
Just because your water appears clear does not mean it is safe to drink. The
2021 Prince William County water clinic found that 21% of the wells tested
present for coliform bacteria. This is lower than previous years. Coliform
bacteria are not a health threat itself; it is used to indicate other bacteria
that may be present and identify that a well is not properly sealed from
surface bacteria. The federal standard for coliform bacteria is zero, but the
federal standard allows that up to 5% of samples can test positive for coliform
during a month.
One of those wells tested positive for E coli. Fecal
coliform and E. coli are bacteria whose presence indicates that the water is
contaminated with human or animal wastes. Disease-causing microbes (pathogens)
in these wastes can cause diarrhea, cramps, nausea, headaches, or other
symptoms. These pathogens may pose a special health risk for infants, young
children, and those with compromised immune systems. However, people can drink
water contaminated with fecal bacteria and not notice.
If your well is contaminated with coliform but not fecal coliform or E. coli,
then you have a nuisance bacteria problem and the source may be infiltration
from the surface from rain or snow melt. Typical causes are improperly sealed
well cap, well repairs performed without disinfecting or adequately
disinfecting the well, failed grouting or surface drainage to the well. Very
low levels of coliform (1-5 MPN) may present during extremely wet periods.
If your well had coliform bacteria present you should shock
chlorinate the well (according to the procedure from VA Tech), repack the soil
around the well pipe to flow away from the well and replace the well cap. Then
after at least two weeks and the next big rainstorm retest the well for coliform.
If coliform bacteria is still present then a long-term treatment should be
implemented: using UV light, ozonation, or chlorine for continuous
disinfection. These systems can cost up to $2,000 installed.
If you have fecal coliform in the well or E. coli, your well is being impacted
by human or animal waste and you are drinking dilute sewage. If there is not a
nearby animal waste composting facility, then you are probably drinking water
from a failed septic system- yours or your nearest neighbors or in some older
areas a leaking sewer line. To solve this problem you need to fix or replace
the septic system that is causing the contamination, replace the well or
install a disinfection and micro filtration or reverse osmosis system.
Disinfection while killing the bacteria does not kill Giardia or
Cryptosporidium, two microscopic parasites that can be found in groundwater
that has been impacted by surface water or sewage. Both parasites produce cysts
that cause illness and sometimes death.
The failing septic systems can often be identified by using tracer dyes. While
continuous disinfection will work to protect you from fecal bacteria and E.
coli, be aware that if your well is being impacted by a septic system, then the
well water might also have present traces of all the chemicals and substances
that get poured down the drain. Long term treatment for disinfection, and
micro-filtration should be implemented: using UV light, ozonation, or chlorine
for continuous disinfection, carbon filtration, and anything that is used for
drinking should be further treated with a reverse osmosis systems or micro
membrane system that works by using pressure to force water through a
semi-permeable membrane. Large quantities of wastewater are produced by reverse
osmosis systems and need to bypass the septic system or they will overwhelm
that system creating more groundwater problems. Reverse osmosis systems produce
water very slowly, a pressurized storage tank and special faucet needs to be
installed so that water is available to meet the demand for drinking and
cooking.
Nitrate can contaminate well water from fertilizer use; leaking from septic
tanks, sewage and erosion of natural deposits. One of the wells in our group of
81 samples had nitrate levels above the MCL. The regulatory limit for nitrate
in public drinking water supplies, 10 mg/L, was set to protect against infant
methemoglobinemia, but other health effects were not considered.
Dr. Mary Ward of the Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch,
Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute has
lead several important studies comparing all the research on the health impacts
from exposure to nitrate in water. The first review was of studies published
before 2005. In 2018 Dr. Ward was lead author on a review of more than 30
epidemiologic studies on drinking water nitrate and health outcomes.
This year they found 9% of homes had first draw lead levels above the SDWA
maximum contaminant level of 0.015 Mg/L. After the flushing the tap for at
least one minute no homes had lead levels above the 0.15 mg/L level; however,
many scientists do not believe that any level of lead is safe to drink over an
extended period of time. Often homes that have elevated lead in the first draw,
have lower pH values.
Houses built before 1988 when the ban on lead went into effect and have low pH
water typically have higher lead concentrations. Lead leaches into water
primarily as a result of corrosion of plumbing and components in the well
itself, but can also result from flaking of scale from brass fittings and well
components. Corrosion control techniques such as adjusting pH or alkalinity
that are commonly used to neutralize aggressive water will not work in to
reduce lead being leached from well components. For most instances, though, a
neutralizing filter and lead removing activated carbon filters can be used to
remove lead leaching from plumbing pipes, solder and fixtures. Recently, some
home water treatment companies are offering in home treatment systems that
neutralize the water and add orthophosphate other phosphate solution to coat
the piping to prevent further corrosion. It should work, but I have never seen
such a home system and am not aware of any testing.
Iron and manganese are naturally occurring elements commonly found in
groundwater in this part of the country. 9.9% of the wells tested exceed the
iron standard and 7.4% exceeded the manganese standard. At naturally occurring
levels iron and manganese do not present a health hazard. However, their
presence in well water can cause unpleasant taste, staining and accumulation of
mineral solids that can clog water treatment equipment and plumbing and
discolored water. The standard Secondary Maximum Contaminant Level (SMCL) for
iron is 0.3 milligrams per liter (mg/L or ppm) and 0.05 mg/L for manganese.
This level of iron and manganese can be detected by taste, smell or appearance.
In addition, some types of bacteria react with soluble forms of iron and
manganese and form persistent bacterial contamination in a well, water system
and any treatment systems. These organisms change the iron and manganese from a
soluble form into a less soluble form, thus causing precipitation and
accumulation of black or reddish brown gelatinous material (slime). Masses of
mucous, iron, and/or manganese can clog plumbing and water treatment equipment.
All systems of removing iron and manganese essentially involve oxidation of the
soluble form or killing and removal of the iron bacteria. When the total
combined iron and manganese concentration is less than 15 mg/l, an oxidizing
filter is the recommended solution. An oxidizing filter supplies oxygen to
convert ferrous iron into a solid form which can be filtered out of the water.
Higher concentrations of iron and manganese can be treated with an aeration and
filtration system. This system is not effective on water with iron/ manganese bacteria
but is very effective on soluble iron and manganese so you need to do further
testing to determine what type of iron/manganese you have before you install a
treatment system. Water softeners can remove low levels of iron and are widely
sold for this purpose because they are very profitable but are now being banned
in some locations due to rising sodium and chloride levels.
Chemical oxidation can be used to remove high levels of dissolved or oxidized
iron and manganese as well as treat the presence of iron/manganese (or even
sulfur) bacteria. The system consists of a small pump that puts an oxidizing
agent into the water before the pressure tank. The water will need about 20
minutes for oxidation to take place so treating before a holding tank or
pressure tank is a must. After the solid particles have formed the water is
filtered. The best oxidizing agents are chlorine or hydrogen peroxide. If
chlorine is used, an activated carbon filter is often used to finish the water
and remove the chlorine taste. The holding tank or pressure tank will have to
be cleaned regularly to remove any settled particles.
The pH of water is a measure of the acidity or alkalinity. The pH is a
logarithmic scale from 0 – 14 with 1 being very acidic and 14 very alkaline.
Drinking water should be between 6.5 and 8.5. For reference and to put this
into perspective, coffee has a pH of around 5 and salt water has a pH of around
9. Corrosive water, sometimes also called aggressive water is typically water
with a low pH. (Alkaline water can also be corrosive.) Low pH water can corrode
metal plumbing fixtures causing lead and copper to leach into the water and
causing pitting and leaks in the plumbing system. The presence of lead or
copper in water is most commonly leaching from the plumbing system or well
rather than the groundwater. Acidic water is easily treated using an acid
neutralizing filter. Typically these neutralizing filters use a granular
marble, calcium carbonate or lime. If the water is very acidic a mixing tank
using soda ash, sodium carbonate or sodium hydroxide can be used. The acid
neutralizing filters will increase the hardness of the water because of the
addition of calcium carbonate. 16% of the wells tested were found to have
acidic water this year.
Water that contains high levels of dissolved minerals is commonly referred to
as hard. Groundwater very slowly wears away at the rocks and minerals picking
up small amounts of calcium and magnesium ions. Water containing approximately
125 mg/L can begin to have a noticeable impact and is considered hard.
Concentrations above 180 mg/L are considered very hard. Hard water can be just
a minor annoyance with spotting and the buildup of lime scale, but once water
reaches the very hard level 180 mg/L or 10.5 grains per gallon, it can become
problematic. Overall 7.4% of homes tested had hard water.
Two methods are commercially available (and certified) to
treat hard water. A water softener and a water that work through a process
called template assisted crystallization (TAC), have been certified by
DVGW-W512 and are available in whole house units. In template assisted
crystallization, water flows through a tank of TAC
media. When the hard water comes into contact with the media, the magnesium
and calcium ions are caught by the nucleation sites. As more calcium and
magnesium ions build up within the sites, small micro-crystals form and flow
through your plumbing. They do not attach themselves to your water pipes as
scale.
The ubiquitous water softening system is an ion exchange
system consisting of a mineral tank and a brine tank. The mineral tank holds
small beads of resin that have a negative electrical charge. The calcium and
magnesium ions (along with small amounts of other minerals) are positively
charged and are attracted to the negatively charged beads. This attraction
makes the minerals stick to the beads as the hard water passes through the
mineral tank. Sodium from salt is used to charge the resin beads. The brine
tank is flushed out when the resin beads are recharged carrying the salty
solution to the environment. The salinity of surface waters and groundwater is
an emerging environmental concern. Research has shown that salinization has
affected over a third of the drainage area of the contiguous United States even
in areas without road salt. At the present time the EPA guidance level for
sodium in drinking water is 20 mg/L. Given the number of homes with elevated
sodium and our local geology, it is probably a reflection of the number of
homes with water softeners-50.6% of the wells tested had elevated sodium.
1.2% of wells were found that had arsenic exceeding the EPA MCL for drinking
water of 10 ppm. While arsenic is a naturally occurring element found in soil
and groundwater it is not typically found at significantly elevated levels in
this geology. Arsenic is best removed by water treatment methods such as
reverse osmosis, ultra-filtration, distillation, or as a last choice ion
exchange (water softeners). Typically, these methods are used to treat water at
only one faucet. Though anionic exchange systems (water softeners) are whole
house systems, they may not be the best choice.
No comments:
Post a Comment