 |
Naturally occurring water can contain a variety of
inorganic chemicals and microorganisms. In addition, human
activities from farming, manufacturing, and even residential living
produces chemical and biological waste products that may contaminate
drinking water sources.
In general, the greater the concentration of human
activity, the greater the risk to drinking water. |
|
US Environmental Protection Agency regulations and
Florida Statutes are written to help reduce the risk from
encountering contaminated drinking water. The tighter statutes and
rules are made, the more risk potential is
reduced, but at the cost of added financial and administrative
burdens to Florida citizens.
Current Florida rules on drinking water strive to
achieve a balance between proliferating requirements and allowing
opportunities for undue and dangerous health risks.
The Florida Safe Drinking Water
Act, as administered by the Department of Environmental
Protection and 11 delegated counties, helps to safeguard municipal
water supplies serving municipalities and large public water system
communities from a wide range of more than 100 chemical, biological,
and radiological contaminants.
Chapter 64E-8, F.A.C.,as
administered by the Department of Health, helps to safeguard private
and limited use public water systems in mostly rural Florida.
Chapter 64E-8,F.A.C., rules have been written to protect our most
vulnerable citizens -- the very young, the very old, persons with
immune deficiencies, and also tenants, visitors, customers, and
workers who have no control of the quality of the water they drink
in an establishment. |