April 16, 2021

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A path toward clean drinking water for all Californians

Wellhead treatment plants like this one play an important role in providing clean water to communities across the state. Credit: California State Water Resources Control Board
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Wellhead treatment plants like this one play an important role in providing clean water to communities across the state. Credit: California State Water Resources Control Board

California was the first U.S. state to legally recognize access to safe, clean and affordable water as a human right. But substantial parts of the state lack access to drinking water that meets those criteria.

A new study published by the California State Water Board and supported by UCLA research identifies a risk for failure among a significant portion of the state's small and medium-sized public systems. The report is the first comprehensive analysis of how is provided in California, and it estimates how much it would actually cost to deliver to every resident.

The research was a collaboration between the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation, the water board's Needs Analysis Unit, Corona Environmental Consulting, Sacramento State University's Office of Water Programs, the Pacific Institute and the University of North Carolina's Environmental Finance Center.

Of the 2,779 public water systems evaluated in the study, nearly half are at some risk of failing to provide an adequate supply of safe drinking water. To measure the health of water systems, the researchers assessed each water system using 19 indicators for water quality, accessibility, affordability and operational capacity.

Based on those assessments, each system received an overall rating indicating how likely it would be to fail—from "not at risk" at the top end of the scale, to "potentially at risk" and "at risk" for the systems with the lowest scores. The researchers found 25 percent of water systems to be "at risk," while an additional 23 percent are "potentially at risk."

The study also identified locations where groundwater quality is out of compliance with the state's safe water drinking standards. About one-third of domestic wells and one-half of state small water systems were found to be at a high risk for containing contaminants like nitrate and arsenic.

"Illuminating the extent of at-risk water systems is an important step," said Gregory Pierce, the study's principal investigator and an associate director at the Luskin Center for Innovation. "By more fully understanding the issues, we can move to more resilient and accessible water sources."

The study noted that and infrastructure issues vary substantially across the state. For instance, Kings County, in central California, has the highest proportion of at-risk (75 percent), while San Francisco County and Modoc County in the northern part of the state have zero at-risk systems.

The research incorporated a comprehensive evaluation of thousands of water systems and hundreds of thousands of wells, as well as input from water managers, environmental nonprofits and advocacy groups.

Among the other findings:

Holistic solutions can help.

More funding will be needed.

The analysis suggests prioritizing funding for water systems that are currently most at risk and that are located in underserved communities. It also sets the stage for a deeper investigation of how the state can ensure safe, clean and affordable water for all—an especially salient issue as Congress is considering a federal infrastructure bill that would, in part, address the systems that deliver drinking water throughout the U.S.

"I'm optimistic that as a nation, we're talking about upgrading our pipes and cleaning up our contaminated water," said Peter Roquemore, a co-author of the study and a researcher at the Luskin Center for Innovation. "Infrastructure might not always be glamorous, but the impacts of fixing our water systems would be huge."

Provided by University of California

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