Table of Contents
Can You Drink Tap Water in Brooklyn Park?
Yes, Brooklyn Park's tap water is generally considered safe to drink as Brooklyn Park has no active health based violations of the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) that we are aware of. Other factors such as lead piping in a home, or low levels of pollutants on immunocompromised individuals, should also be considered, however. To find more recent info we might have, you can check out our boil water notice page or the city's water provider website.
According the EPA’s ECHO database, from April 30, 2019 to June 30, 2022, Brooklyn Park's water utility, Brooklyn Park, had 4 non-health-based violations of the Safe Drinking Water Act. For more details on the violations, please see our violation history section below. The last violation for Brooklyn Park was resolved on Dec. 31, 2021. There has been an active violation for Lead and Copper Rule since Oct. 1, 2019. This assessment is based on the Brooklyn Park water system, other water systems in the city may have different results.
While tap water that meets the EPA health guidelines generally won’t make you sick to your stomach, it can still contain regulated and unregulated contaminants present in trace amounts that could potentially cause health issues over the long-run. These trace contaminants may also impact immunocompromised and vulnerable individuals.
The EPA is reviewing if it’s current regulations around pollutant levels in tap water are strict enough, and the health dangers posed by unregulated pollutants, like PFAS.
Water Quality Report for Brooklyn Park Tap Water
The most recent publicly available numbers for measured contaminant levels in Brooklyn Park tap water are in its 2020 Water Quality Report. As you can see, there are levels which the EPA considers to be acceptable, but being below the maximum allowable level doesn’t necessarily mean the water is healthy.
Lead in tap water, for example, is currently allowed at up to 15ppb by the EPA, but it has set the ideal goal for lead at zero. This highlights how meeting EPA standards doesn’t necessarily mean local tap water is healthy.
EPA regulations continue to change as it evaluates the long term impacts of chemicals and updates drinking water acceptable levels. The rules around arsenic, as well as, lead and copper are currently being re-evaluated.
There are also a number of "emerging" contaminants that are not currently. For example, PFAS (Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances), for which the EPA has issued a health advisory. PFAS are called "forever chemicals" since they tend not to break down in the environment or the human body and can accumulate over time.
We recommend looking at the contaminants present in Brooklyn Park's water quality reports, or getting your home's tap water tested to see if you should be filtering your water.
Brooklyn Park Tap Water Safe Drinking Water Act Violation History - Prior 10 Years
Below is a ten year history of violations for the water system named Brooklyn Park for Brooklyn Park in Minnesota. For more details please see the "What do these Violations Mean?" section below.
From Jan. 1, 2021 to Dec. 31, 2021, Brooklyn Park had 2 non-health based Safe Drinking Water Act violations with the violation category being Monitoring and Reporting, more specifically, the violation code was Monitoring and Reporting (DBP) which falls into the Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule rule code group, and the Stage 2 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule rule code family for the following contaminant codes: Total Haloacetic Acids (HAA5), TTHM.
For the compliance period beginning Oct. 1, 2020, Brooklyn Park had 1 non-health based Safe Drinking Water Act violation with the violation category being Monitoring and Reporting, more specifically, the violation code was Follow-up Or Routine LCR Tap M/R which falls into the Chemicals rule code group, and the Lead and Copper Rule rule code family for the following contaminant code: Lead and Copper Rule.
For the compliance period beginning Oct. 1, 2019, Brooklyn Park had 1 non-health based Safe Drinking Water Act violation with the violation category being Monitoring and Reporting, more specifically, the violation code was Follow-up Or Routine LCR Tap M/R which falls into the Chemicals rule code group, and the Lead and Copper Rule rule code family for the following contaminant code: Lead and Copper Rule.
Is there Lead in Brooklyn Park Water?
Based on the EPA’s ECHO Database, 90% of the samples taken from the Brooklyn Park water system, Brooklyn Park, between sample start date and sample end date, were at or below, 0.001 mg/L of lead in Brooklyn Park water. This is 6.7% of the 0.015 mg/L action level. This means 10% of the samples taken from Brooklyn Park contained more lead.
While Brooklyn Park water testing may have found 0.001 mg/L of lead in its water, that does not mean your water source has the same amount. The amount of lead in water in a city can vary greatly from neighborhood to neighborhood, or even building to building. Many buildings, particularly older ones, have lead pipes or service lines which can be a source of contamination. To find out if your home has lead, we recommend getting you water tested.
No amount of lead in water is healthy, only less dangerous. As lead accumulates in our bodies over time, even exposure to relatively small amounts can have negative health effects. For more information, please check out our Lead FAQ page.
Are there PFAS in Brooklyn Park Tap Water?
Currently, testing tap water for PFAS isn’t mandated on a national level. We do have a list of military bases where there have been suspected or confirmed leaks. There appears to be at least one military base - MINNEAPOLIS MN NIROP - near Brooklyn Park with suspected leaks.
With many potential sources of PFAS in tap water across the US, the best information we currently have about which cities have PFAS in their water is this ewg map, which you can check to see if Brooklyn Park has been evaluated for yet.
Our stance is better safe than sorry, and that it makes sense to try to purify the tap water just in case.
Brooklyn Park SDWA Violation History Table - Prior 10 Years
Compliance Period | Status | Health-Based? | Category Code | Code | Rule Code | Contaminant Code | Rule Group Code | Rule Family Code |
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01/01/2021 - 12/31/2021 | Resolved | No | Monitoring and Reporting (MR) | Monitoring and Reporting (DBP) (27) | Stage 2 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule (220) | Total Haloacetic Acids (HAA5) (2456) | Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule (200) | Stage 2 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule (220) |
01/01/2021 - 12/31/2021 | Resolved | No | Monitoring and Reporting (MR) | Monitoring and Reporting (DBP) (27) | Stage 2 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule (220) | TTHM (2950) | Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule (200) | Stage 2 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule (220) |
10/01/2020 - | Resolved | No | Monitoring and Reporting (MR) | Follow-up Or Routine LCR Tap M/R (52) | Lead and Copper Rule (350) | Lead and Copper Rule (5000) | Chemicals (300) | Lead and Copper Rule (350) |
10/01/2019 - | Unaddressed | No | Monitoring and Reporting (MR) | Follow-up Or Routine LCR Tap M/R (52) | Lead and Copper Rule (350) | Lead and Copper Rule (5000) | Chemicals (300) | Lead and Copper Rule (350) |
What do these Violations Mean?
Safe Drinking Water Act Violations categories split into two groups, health based, and non-health based. Generally, health based violations are more serious, though non-health based violations can also be cause for concern.
Health Based Violations
- Maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) - maximum allowed contaminant level was exceeded.
- Maximum residual disinfectant levels (MRDLs) - maximum allowed disinfectant level was exceeded.
- Other violations (Other) - the exact required process to reduce the amounts of contaminants in drinking water was not followed.
Non-Health Based Violations
- Monitoring and reporting violations (MR, MON) - failure to conduct the required regular monitoring of drinking water quality, and/or to submit monitoring results on time.
- Public notice violations (Other) - failure to immediately alert consumers if there is a serious problem with their drinking water that may pose a risk to public health.
- Other violations (Other) - miscellaneous violations, such as failure to issue annual consumer confidence reports or maintain required records.
SDWA Table Key
Field | Description |
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Compliance Period | Dates of the compliance period. |
Status |
Current status of the violation.
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Health-Based? | Whether the violation is health based. |
Category Code |
The category of violation that is reported.
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Code | A full description of violation codes can be accessed in the SDWA_REF_CODE_VALUES (CSV) table. |
Contaminant Code | A code value that represents a contaminant for which a public water system has incurred a violation of a primary drinking water regulation. |
Rule Code |
Code for a National Drinking Water rule.
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Rule Group Code |
Code that uniquely identifies a rule group.
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Rule Family Code |
Code for rule family.
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For more clarification please visit the EPA's data dictionary.
Brooklyn Park Water - Frequently Asked Questions
By Mail: | Brooklyn Park City Hall 5200 85th Avenue North Brooklyn Park, MN, 55443 |
Existing customers can login to their Brooklyn Park account to pay their Brooklyn Park water bill by clicking here.
If you want to pay your Brooklyn Park bill online and haven't made an account yet, you can create an account online. Please click here to create your account to pay your Brooklyn Park water bill.
If you don't want to make an account, or can't remember your account, you can make a one-time payment towards your Brooklyn Park water bill without creating an account using a one time payment portal with your account number and credit or debit card. Click here to make a one time payment.
Moving to a new house or apartment in Brooklyn Park means you will often need to put the water in your name with Brooklyn Park. In order to put the water in your name, please click the link to the start service form below. Start service requests for water bills typically take two business days.
Leaving your house or apartment in Brooklyn Park means you will likely need to take your name off of the water bill with Brooklyn Park. In order to take your name off the water bill, please click the link to the stop service form below. Stop service for water bills requests typically take two business days.
USER SUBMITTED RATINGS
- Drinking Water Pollution and Inaccessibility
- Water Pollution
- Drinking Water Quality and Accessibility
- Water Quality
The above data is comprised of subjective, user submitted opinions about the water quality and pollution in Brooklyn Park, measured on a scale from 0% (lowest) to 100% (highest).
Related FAQS
Brooklyn Park Water Quality Report (Consumer Confidence Report)
The EPA mandates that towns and cities consistently monitor and test their tap water. They must report their findings in an annual Consumer Confidence Report. Below is the most recent water quality report from Brooklyn Park's Water. If you would like to see the original version of the report, please click here.
C O N S U M E R C O N F I D E N C E R E P O R T
Brooklyn Park 2020 Drinking Water Report
This report contains important information about your drinking water. Have someone translate it for you, or speak with someone who understands it.
Información importante. Si no la entiende, haga que alguien se la traduzca ahora.
P U B L I C W A T E R S U P P L Y I D E N T I F I C A T I O N ( P W S I D ) : 1 2 7 0 0 0 5 |
P A G E 1 |
C O N S U M E R C O N F I D E N C E R E P O R T
Making Safe Drinking Water
Your drinking water comes from a groundwater source: fourteen wells ranging from 213 to 617 feet deep, that draw water from the Tunnel
Brooklyn Park works hard to provide you with safe and reliable drinking water that meets federal and state water quality requirements. The purpose of this report is to provide you with information on your drinking water and how to protect our precious water resources.
Contact Richard Luckow, Public Utilities Superintendent, at
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency sets safe drinking water standards. These standards limit the amounts of specific contaminants allowed in drinking water. This ensures that tap water is safe to drink for most people. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulates the amount of certain contaminants in bottled water. Bottled water must provide the same public health protection as public tap water.
Drinking water, including bottled water, may reasonably be expected to contain at least small amounts of some contaminants. The presence of contaminants does not necessarily indicate that water poses a health risk. More information about contaminants and potential health effects can be obtained by calling the Environmental Protection Agency’s Safe Drinking Water Hotline at
Brooklyn Park Monitoring Results
This report contains our monitoring results from January 1 to December 31, 2020.
We work with the Minnesota Department of Health to test drinking water for more than 100 contaminants. It is not unusual to detect contaminants in small amounts. No water supply is ever completely free of contaminants. Drinking water standards protect Minnesotans from substances that may be harmful to their health.
Learn more by visiting the Minnesota Department of Health’s webpage Basics of Monitoring and testing of Drinking Water in Minnesota (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/factsheet/sampling.html).
P U B L I C W A T E R S U P P L Y I D E N T I F I C A T I O N ( P W S I D ) : 1 2 7 0 0 0 5 |
P A G E 2 |
C O N S U M E R C O N F I D E N C E R E P O R T
How to Read the Water Quality Data Tables
The tables below show the contaminants we found last year or the most recent time we sampled for that contaminant. They also show the levels of those contaminants and the Environmental Protection Agency’s limits. Substances that we tested for but did not find are not included in the tables.
We sample for some contaminants less than once a year because their levels in water are not expected to change from year to year. If we found any of these contaminants the last time we sampled for them, we included them in the tables below with the detection date.
We may have done additional monitoring for contaminants that are not included in the Safe Drinking Water Act. To request a copy of these results, call the Minnesota Department of Health at
Some contaminants are monitored regularly throughout the year, and rolling (or moving) annual averages are used to manage compliance. Because of this averaging, there are times where the Range of Detected Test Results for the calendar year is lower than the Highest Average or Highest Single Test Result, because it occurred in the previous calendar year.
Definitions
- EPA: Environmental Protection Agency
- MCL (Maximum contaminant level): The highest level of a contaminant that is allowed in drinking water. MCLs are set as close to the MCLGs as feasible using the best available treatment technology.
- MCLG (Maximum contaminant level goal): The level of a contaminant in drinking water below which there is no known or expected risk to health. MCLGs allow for a margin of safety.
- MRDL (Maximum residual disinfectant level): The highest level of a disinfectant allowed in drinking water. There is convincing evidence that addition of a disinfectant is necessary for control of microbial contaminants.
- MRDLG (Maximum residual disinfectant level goal): The level of a drinking water disinfectant below which there is no known or expected risk to health. MRDLGs do not reflect the benefits of the use of disinfectants to control microbial contaminants.
- N/A (Not applicable): Does not apply.
- pCi/l (picocuries per liter): A measure of radioactivity.
- ppb (parts per billion): One part per billion in water is like one drop in one billion drops of water, or about one drop in a swimming pool. ppb is the same as micrograms per liter (μg/l).
- ppm (parts per million): One part per million is like one drop in one million drops of water, or about one cup in a swimming pool. ppm is the same as milligrams per liter (mg/l).
- PWSID: Public water system identification.
P U B L I C W A T E R S U P P L Y I D E N T I F I C A T I O N ( P W S I D ) : 1 2 7 0 0 0 5 |
P A G E 3 |
C O N S U M E R C O N F I D E N C E R E P O R T
Monitoring Results – Regulated Substances
INORGANIC & ORGANIC CONTAMINANTS – Tested in drinking water.
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EPA’s |
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Highest |
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Contaminant |
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EPA’s |
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Average or |
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Range of |
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Ideal |
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(Date, if sampled |
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Limit |
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Highest |
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Detected |
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Violation |
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Typical Sources |
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Goal |
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in previous year) |
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(MCL) |
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Single Test |
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Test Results |
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Result |
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Nitrate |
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10 ppm |
10.4 |
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0.07 ppm |
0.00 - 0.07 |
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NO |
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Runoff from fertilizer use; |
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ppm |
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ppm |
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Leaching from septic |
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tanks, sewage; Erosion of |
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natural deposits. |
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Barium |
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2 ppm |
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2 ppm |
0.08 ppm |
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N/A |
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NO |
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Discharge of drilling |
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wastes; Discharge from |
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metal refineries; Erosion |
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of natural deposit. |
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Cadmium |
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5 ppb |
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5 ppb |
2.56 ppb |
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N/A |
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NO |
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Corrosion of galvanized |
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pipes; Erosion of natural |
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deposits; Discharge from |
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metal refineries; Runoff |
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from waste batteries and |
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paints. |
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Gross Alpha |
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0 pCi/l |
15.4 |
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3.8 pCi/l |
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N/A |
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NO |
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Erosion of natural |
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(2019) |
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pCi/l |
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deposits. |
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Combined |
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0 pCi/l |
5.4 |
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4.4 pCi/l |
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N/A |
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NO |
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Erosion of natural |
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Radium (2019) |
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pCi/l |
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deposits. |
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P U B L I C W A T E R S U P P L Y I D E N T I F I C A T I O N ( P W S I D ) : 1 2 7 0 0 0 5 |
P A G E 4 |
C O N S U M E R C O N F I D E N C E R E P O R T
CONTAMINANTS RELATED TO DISINFECTION – Tested in drinking water.
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EPA’s |
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Substance (Date, if |
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EPA’s Ideal |
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Average or |
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Range of |
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Limit |
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sampled in previous |
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Goal (MCLG |
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Highest |
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Detected |
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Violation |
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Typical Sources |
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year) |
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or MRDLG) |
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Single Test |
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Test Results |
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MRDL) |
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Result |
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Total |
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N/A |
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80 ppb |
43.1 ppb |
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N/A |
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NO |
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Trihalomethanes |
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drinking water |
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(TTHMs) (2019) |
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disinfection. |
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Total Haloacetic |
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N/A |
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60 ppb |
13.6 ppb |
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N/A |
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NO |
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Acids (HAA) (2019) |
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drinking water |
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disinfection. |
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Total Chlorine |
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4.0 ppm |
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4.0 ppm |
0.59 ppm |
0.54 - 0.64 |
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NO |
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Water additive |
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ppm |
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used to control |
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microbes. |
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Total HAA refers to HAA5
OTHER SUBSTANCES – Tested in drinking water.
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Substance (Date, |
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EPA’s |
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EPA’s |
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Highest |
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Range of |
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Average or |
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if sampled in |
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Ideal Goal |
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Limit |
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Detected |
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Violation |
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Typical Sources |
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Highest Single |
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previous year) |
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Test Results |
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Test Result |
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Fluoride |
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4.0 ppm |
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4.0 ppm |
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0.54 ppm |
0.44 - 0.62 |
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NO |
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Erosion of natural |
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ppm |
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deposits; Water |
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additive to promote |
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strong teeth. |
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Potential Health Effects and Corrective Actions (If Applicable)
Fluoride: If your drinking water fluoride levels are below the optimal concentration range of
0.5 to 0.9 ppm, please talk with your dentist about how you can protect your teeth and your family's teeth from tooth decay and cavities. For more information, visit: MDH Drinking Water Fluoridation (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/com/fluoride.html). Fluoride is nature's cavity fighter, with small amounts present naturally in many drinking water sources. There is an overwhelming weight of credible,
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levels below 2.0 ppm are not expected to increase the risk of a cosmetic condition known as enamel fluorosis.
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Monitoring Results – Unregulated Substances
In addition to testing drinking water for contaminants regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act, we sometimes also monitor for contaminants that are not regulated. Unregulated contaminants do not have legal limits for drinking water.
Detection alone of a regulated or unregulated contaminant should not cause concern. The meaning of a detection should be determined considering current health effects information. We are often still learning about the health effects, so this information can change over time.
The following table shows the unregulated contaminants we detected last year, as well as
A person drinking water with a contaminant at or below the comparison value would be at little or no risk for harmful health effects. If the level of a contaminant is above the comparison value, people of a certain age or with special health conditions - like a fetus, infants, children, elderly, and people with impaired immunity – may need to take extra precautions. Because these contaminants are unregulated, EPA and MDH require no particular action based on detection of an unregulated contaminant. We are notifying you of the unregulated contaminants we have detected as a public education opportunity.
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More information is available on MDH’s
A-Z List of Contaminants in Water (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/contaminants/index.html) and Fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4) (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/com/ucmr4.html).
UNREGULATED CONTAMINANTS – Tested in drinking water.
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Highest Average Result |
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Range of Detected Test |
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Contaminant |
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Comparison Value |
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or Highest Single Test |
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Results |
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Result |
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Manganese |
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100 ppb |
19 ppb |
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N/A |
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Sodium* |
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20 ppm |
15.9 ppm |
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N/A |
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Sulfate |
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500 ppm |
99 ppm |
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N/A |
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Group of 6 Haloacetic |
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N/A |
9.08 ppb |
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8.02 - 10.13 ppb |
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Acids (HAA6Br) |
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Group of 9 Haloacetic |
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N/A |
15.68 ppb |
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Acids (HAA9) |
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*Note that home water softening can increase the level of sodium in your water.
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Some People Are More Vulnerable to Contaminants in Drinking Water
Some people may be more vulnerable to contaminants in drinking water than the general population.
Learn More about Your Drinking Water
Drinking Water Sources
Minnesota’s primary drinking water sources are groundwater and surface water. Groundwater is the water found in aquifers beneath the surface of the land. Groundwater supplies 75 percent of Minnesota’s drinking water. Surface water is the water in lakes, rivers, and streams above the surface of the land. Surface water supplies 25 percent of Minnesota’s drinking water.
Contaminants can get in drinking water sources from the natural environment and from people’s daily activities. There are five main types of contaminants in drinking water sources.
- Microbial contaminants, such as viruses, bacteria, and parasites. Sources include sewage treatment plants, septic systems, agricultural livestock operations, pets, and wildlife.
- Inorganic contaminants include salts and metals from natural sources (e.g. rock and soil), oil and gas production, mining and farming operations, urban stormwater runoff, and wastewater discharges.
- Pesticides and herbicides are chemicals used to reduce or kill unwanted plants and pests. Sources include agriculture, urban stormwater runoff, and commercial and residential properties.
- Organic chemical contaminants include synthetic and volatile organic compounds. Sources include industrial processes and petroleum production, gas stations, urban stormwater runoff, and septic systems.
- Radioactive contaminants such as radium, thorium, and uranium isotopes come from natural sources (e.g. radon gas from soils and rock), mining operations, and oil and gas production.
The Minnesota Department of Health provides information about your drinking water source(s) in a source water assessment, including:
- How Brooklyn Park is protecting your drinking water source(s);
- Nearby threats to your drinking water sources;
- How easily water and pollution can move from the surface of the land into drinking water sources, based on natural geology and the way wells are constructed.
Find your source water assessment at Source Water Assessments (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/swp/swa) or call
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Lead in Drinking Water
You may be in contact with lead through paint, water, dust, soil, food, hobbies, or your job. Coming in contact with lead can cause serious health problems for everyone. There is no safe level of lead. Babies, children under six years, and pregnant women are at the highest risk.
Lead is rarely in a drinking water source, but it can get in your drinking water as it passes through lead service lines and your household plumbing system. Brooklyn Park is responsible for providing high quality drinking water, but it cannot control the plumbing materials used in private buildings.
Read below to learn how you can protect yourself from lead in drinking water.
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Let the water run for
30-60 seconds before using it for drinking or cooking if the water has not been turned on in over six hours. If you have a lead service line, you may need to let the water run longer. A service line is the underground pipe that brings water from the main water pipe under the street to your home. -
You can find out if you have a lead service line by contacting your public water system, or you can check by following the steps at:
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2016/06/24/npr-find-lead- pipes-in-your-home - The only way to know if lead has been reduced by letting it run is to check with a test. If letting the water run does not reduce lead, consider other options to reduce your exposure.
- Use cold water for drinking, making food, and making baby formula. Hot water releases more lead from pipes than cold water.
- Test your water. In most cases, letting the water run and using cold water for drinking and cooking should keep lead levels low in your drinking water. If you are still concerned about lead, arrange with a laboratory to test your tap water. Testing your water is important if young children or pregnant women drink your tap water.
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Contact a Minnesota Department of Health accredited laboratory to get a sample container and instructions on how to submit a sample:
Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Program (https://eldo.web.health.state.mn.us/public/accreditedlabs/labsearch.seam) The Minnesota Department of Health can help you understand your test results. - Treat your water if a test shows your water has high levels of lead after you let the water run.
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Read about water treatment units:
Point-of-Use Water Treatment Units for Lead Reduction (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/factsheet/poulead.html)
Learn more:
- Visit Lead in Drinking Water (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/contaminants/lead.html)
- Visit Basic Information about Lead in Drinking Water (http://www.epa.gov/safewater/lead)
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Call the EPA Safe Drinking Water Hotline at
1-800-426-4791.To learn about how to reduce your contact with lead from sources other than your drinking water, visit Lead Poisoning Prevention: Common Sources (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/lead/sources.html).
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Help Protect Our Most Precious Resource – Water
Conservation
Conservation is essential, even in the land of 10,000 lakes. For example, in parts of the metropolitan area, groundwater is being used faster than it can be replaced. Some agricultural regions in Minnesota are vulnerable to drought, which can affect crop yields and municipal water supplies.
We must use our water wisely. Below are some tips to help you and your family conserve – and save money in the process.
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Fix running
toilets—they can waste hundreds of gallons of water. - Turn off the tap while shaving or brushing your teeth.
- Shower instead of bathe. Bathing uses more water than showering, on average.
- Only run full loads of laundry, and set the washing machine to the correct water level.
- Only run the dishwasher when it’s full.
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Use
water-efficient appliances (look for the WaterSense label). -
Use
water-friendly landscaping, such as native plants. - When you do water your yard, water slowly, deeply, and less frequently. Water early in the morning and close to the ground.
- Learn more
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Reduce Backflow at Cross Connections
Bacteria and chemicals can enter the drinking water supply from polluted water sources in a process called backflow. Backflow occurs at connection points between drinking water and
For example, if a person sprays an herbicide with a garden hose, the herbicide could enter the home's plumbing and then enter the drinking water supply. This could happen if the water pressure in the hose is greater than the water pressure in the home's pipes.
Property owners can help prevent backflow. Pay attention to cross connections, such as garden hoses.
The Minnesota Department of Health and American Water Works Association recommend the following:
- Do not submerge hoses in buckets, pools, tubs, or sinks.
- Keep the end of hoses clear of possible contaminants.
- Do not use spray attachments without a backflow prevention device. Attach these devices to threaded faucets. Such devices are inexpensive and available at hardware stores.
- Use a licensed plumber to install backflow prevention devices.
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Maintain air gaps between hose outlets and liquids. An air gap is a vertical space between the water outlet and the flood level of a fixture (e.g. the space between a
wall-mounted faucet and the sink rim). It must be at least twice the diameter of the water supply outlet, and at least one inch. - Commercial property owners should develop a plan for flushing or cleaning water systems to minimize the risk of drawing contaminants into uncontaminated areas.
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Contaminants
Brooklyn Park
EWG's drinking water quality report shows results of tests conducted by the water utility and provided to the Environmental Working Group by the Minnesota Department of Health - Environmental Health Division, as well as information from the U.S. EPA Enforcement and Compliance History database (ECHO). For the latest quarter assessed by the U.S. EPA (January 2019 - March 2019), tap water provided by this water utility was in compliance with federal health-based drinking water standards.
Utility details
- Serves: 75781
- Data available: 2012-2017
- Data Source: Groundwater
- Total: 15
Contaminants That Exceed Guidelines
- Bromodichloromethane
- Chloroform
- Chromium (hexavalent)
- Dibromochloromethane
- Dichloroacetic acid
- Radium%2C combined (-226 & -228)
- Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
- Trichloroacetic acid
Other Detected Contaminants
- Barium
- Bromoform
- Dibromoacetic acid
- Fluoride
- Haloacetic acids (HAA5)
- Nitrate
- Strontium
Reminder
Always take extra precautions, the water may be safe to drink when it leaves the sewage treatment plant but it may pick up pollutants during its way to your tap. We advise that you ask locals or hotel staff about the water quality. Also, note that different cities have different water mineral contents.