1 / 15

Sanitary Surveys

Sanitary Surveys. Gary Carlson Drinking Water Program EPA Region 8. Sanitary Surveys. Who What When Why Typical Findings. Sanitary Surveys. Who conducts sanitary surveys?

gracef
Download Presentation

Sanitary Surveys

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sanitary Surveys Gary Carlson Drinking Water Program EPA Region 8

  2. Sanitary Surveys Who What When Why Typical Findings

  3. Sanitary Surveys • Who conducts sanitary surveys? - State Program staff or an agent or contractor approved by the regulator (40 CFR 141.21(d)(2))

  4. Sanitary Surveys • The Surveyor should have: - experience or knowledge about the operation and maintenance of public water systems - a sound understanding of public health principles and waterborne diseases - a thorough understanding of applicable regulations

  5. Sanitary Surveys • A Sanitary Survey is an on-site evaluation of: - the system’s water source(s) - treatment - storage and distribution facilities and equipment - the operation and maintenance practices for each

  6. Sanitary Surveys • How are Sanitary Surveys done? - Before doing a survey: Surveyors need to do a thorough review of existing monitoring data, past surveys, and well logs - Survey visit must be coordinated with manager or operator

  7. Sanitary Surveys • How are Sanitary Surveys done? - During a survey: look for key problems; walk through entire facility; thorough interview of operator; use standard format - take pictures, sketch the entire water system - get latitude and longitude or township range information on key features of the water system

  8. Sanitary Surveys • How are Sanitary Surveys done? • After survey is complete: - write complete report and highlight problems that need correction

  9. Sanitary Surveys • When are Sanitary Surveys done? - An initial survey by June 29, 1999 of all non-community systems that do not collect at least 5 or more routine samples for bacteriological analyses each month, and - once every five years thereafter except that,...

  10. Sanitary Surveys • When are Sanitary Surveys done? - non-community water systems using only protected and disinfected groundwater must undergo a sanitary survey at least once every ten years following the initial survey (40 CFR 141.21(d))

  11. Sanitary Surveys • Why are Sanitary Surveys necessary? - to identify deficiencies in a water system before they become a threat to public health - to help operators develop a better understanding of the importance of their duties - to help operators improve their operations so that they stay in compliance with the regulations

  12. Sanitary Surveys • Typical findings during Sanitary Surveys: - unprotected hose bibs; threaded spigot with no anti-siphon device - no locks on storage tanks, collection vaults, treatment facilities, outside electrical panels - tank covers that allow entrance of contaminants; holes, bad fit, rotting wood

  13. Sanitary Surveys • Typical findings, continued: • storage of fuel and/or flammables, chemicals in well houses, water treatment buildings or vaults • sanitary wellhead seals compromised by open holes through seal for electrical service and/or open hole for vent

  14. Sanitary Surveys • Typical findings, continued: - well vaults that flood above the height of the well casing - leaky vault toilets within the recharge area of the well or spring - damaged facilities, tanks, equipment that has not been repaired

  15. Sanitary Surveys • Typical findings, continued: - spring developments with no fence to keep livestock, wildlife, people and development away from the recharge and collection areas - springs with no surface drainage up-gradient of collection area; no screens on overflow, drain and vents

More Related