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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
April
Arsenic removal from drinking
water is focus of new projects
Eva Kingston,
State Water Survey
217-244-7270, eva@sws.uiuc.edu
4/6/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
More stringent federal standards for acceptable levels of arsenic in
public drinking water go into effect next year, a prospect that has
resulted in four new research projects on arsenic.
The research, funded by the Midwest
Technology Assistance Center for Small Public Water Systems, will
address the new standards, which will change the acceptable level of
arsenic in public groundwater supplies from 50 micrograms per liter
to 10 mg/l. The center, housed at the Illinois
State Water Survey, is a joint effort between that agency and the
Water Resources Center
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Chronic exposure to high arsenic concentrations can cause cancer and
other diseases. Private water supplies are not subject to regulations,
but high arsenic concentrations do occur in many private wells.
“We feel the work we’re funding, especially on arsenic,
really is making a difference,” said Kent Smothers, the managing
director of the center. “Such projects are critical to small systems
throughout the Midwest.”
The center, one of nine throughout the United States, receives annual
funding from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and provides grants
or direct funding for work by state and university researchers on key
areas for small water systems.
The projects include optimizing iron addition for arsenic removal at
existing facilities, examining conditions that may control arsenic release
into groundwater supplies, and tracking arsenic concentration variability
in relation to time and pumping procedures. A new technique for more
effective arsenic removal than existing methods also is being examined,
Smothers said.
Arsenic isn’t the only focus of the center’s research.
“Water quality at surface water intakes is being evaluated with
watershed modeling,” Smothers said. “Comparative performance
measures being developed will improve technical, managerial, and financial
capacity of small systems. Drought planning for small systems is another
important area being assessed.”
More information about MTAC and other Centers is available on the Web.
The ISWS Public Service
Laboratory provides analyses of water quality free of charge for
owners of domestic wells, Smothers said.
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