ZweigWhite CE News Structural Engineer Rebuilding America's Infrastructure  
 
SEARCH  GO

Latest News
EPA outlines new vision for clean, safe drinking water 

WASHINGTON — In a speech this month at the Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies (AMWA) annual conference in Washington, D.C., U.S. EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson announced the agency is developing a broad new set of strategies to strengthen public health protection from contaminants in drinking water.

The aim is to find solutions that meet the health and economic needs of communities across the country more effectively than the current approach. EPA is also announcing a decision to revise the existing drinking water standards for four contaminants that can cause cancer.

"To confront emerging health threats, strained budgets and increased needs -- today's and tomorrow's drinking water challenges — we must use the law more effectively and promote new technologies," said Jackson. "That means fostering innovation that can increase cost-effective protection. It means finding win-win-win solutions for our health our environment and our economy. And it means broad collaboration. To make our drinking water systems work harder, we have to work smarter."

The new vision is meant to streamline decision-making and expand protection under existing law and promote cost-effective new technologies to meet the needs of rural, urban and other water-stressed communities. Specifically, this shift in drinking water strategy is organized around four key principles:
• Address contaminants as a group rather than one at a time so that enhancement of drinking water protection can be achieved cost-effectively.
• Foster development of new drinking water treatment technologies to address health risks posed by a broad array of contaminants.
• Use the authority of multiple statutes to help protect drinking water.
• Partner with states to share more complete data from monitoring at public water systems.

EPA’s current approach to drinking water protection is focused on a detailed assessment of each individual contaminant of concern and can take many years. This approach not only results in slow progress in addressing unregulated contaminants but also fails to take advantage of strategies for enhancing health protection cost-effectively, including advanced treatment technologies that address several contaminants at once.

The outlined vision seeks to use existing authorities to achieve greater protection more quickly and cost-effectively.

For more information on the strategy, please visit www.epa.gov/safewater/sdwa/dwstrategy.html.
 

Related Engineering Channels




Headlines From Around The Web

Paved, but Still Alive (New York Times)
Blog: Panama Canal Expansion: A Game Changer (Transportation Issues Daily)
Plans envision Pittsburgh 'Aerotropolis' (Pittsburgh Business Times)
GAI Consultants Makes Acquisition (Inside Indiana Business)




Professional Network








Current Issue


Exclusive

Civil engineering industry outlook - Part 1

While 2011 didn't offer too much progress in an economic turnaround, it seems that many people in the architecture, engineering, planning (A/E/P) and environmental consulting industries are adjusting to challenges. For 2012, increased stability is expected, although large changes don't seem likely.


New & Noteworthy


Progressive Engineering


Editor's Comment


ZweigWhite Upcoming Events

Environmental Connection 2012
Date: February 26, 2012 - February 29, 2012
Location: Las Vegas

Principals Academy
Date: March 8, 2012 - March 9, 2012
Location: Ft. Lauderdale FL

Geosynthetic Reinforced Retaining Wall Failures and Their Remediation
Date: March 13, 2012 - March 13, 2012
Location: Folsom PA

2012 Sustainable Water Management Conference
Date: March 18, 2012 - March 21, 2012
Location: Portland OR

Ninth National Conference on Transportation Asset Management
Date: April 16, 2012 - April 18, 2012
Location: San Diego


Events