Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
A supplier exceeding the lead action level based on tap water
samples under Section
611.356 must deliver the public
education materials subsection (a) requires under subsection (b). A supplier
exceeding the lead action level must sample the tap water of any customer
requesting sampling under subsection (c). A small CWS or NTNCWS supplier
electing to implement POU devices as a small supplier compliance flexibility
option under Section 611.363 must provide public
education materials as subsection (j) requires to inform users how to properly
use POU devices. A supplier must deliver a consumer notice of lead tap water
monitoring results to persons the supplier serves at each site that the
supplier samples, as subsection (d) specifies. A supplier with lead, galvanized
requiring replacement, or lead status unknown service lines, as defined in
Section 611.354(a)(4),
must deliver public education materials to persons served through these service
lines as subsections (e) through (g) specify. A CWS supplier must conduct
annual outreach to the Illinois Department of Public Health and local health
agencies as subsection (i) provides. A CWS supplier serving more than 10,000
persons failing to meet its annual lead service line replacement goal under
Section 611.354(f) must
conduct outreach activities as subsection (h) specifies.
a) Content of Written Public Education
Materials
1) Community Water Systems and
Non-Transient Non-Community Water Systems. A CWS or NTNCWS supplier must
include the following elements in printed materials (e.g., brochures and
pamphlets) in the same order as listed in subsections (a)(1)(A) through
(a)(1)(G). In addition, the supplier must use the verbatim language in
subsections (a)(1)(A), (a)(1)(B), and (a)(1)(F), except for replacing the text
in brackets with the system-specific information. Any additional information a
supplier presents must be consistent with the information in subsections
(a)(1)(A), through (a)(1)(G), and the supplier must present the additional
information in plain language that the general public can understand. The
supplier must submit all written public education materials to the Agency prior
to delivery. A supplier may change the mandatory language in subsections
(a)(1)(A) and (a)(1)(B) only as the Agency approves in a SEP.
A) IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT LEAD IN YOUR
DRINKING WATER. [INSERT NAME OF SUPPLIER] found elevated levels of lead in
drinking water in some homes/buildings. Lead can cause serious health problems,
especially for pregnant women and young children. Please read this information
closely to see what you can do to reduce lead in your drinking water.
B) Health Effects of Lead. Exposure to lead
in drinking water can cause serious health effects in all age groups. Infants
and children can have decreases in IQ and attention span. Lead exposure can
lead to new learning and behavior problems or exacerbate existing learning and
behavior problems. The children of women who are exposed to lead before or
during pregnancy can have increased risk of these adverse health effects.
Adults can have increased risks of heart disease, high blood pressure, kidney
or nervous system problems.
C)
Sources of Lead
i) Explain what lead
is.
ii) Explain possible sources of
lead in drinking water and how lead enters drinking water. Include information
on home and building plumbing materials and service lines that may contain
lead.
iii) Discuss other important
sources of lead exposure in addition to drinking water (e.g., paint).
BOARD NOTE: The supplier must use text providing the
information this subsection (a)(1)(C) describes.
D) Discuss the steps the consumer can take to
reduce exposure to lead in drinking water.
i)
Encourage running the water to flush out the lead.
ii) Explain concerns with using hot water
from the tap and specifically caution against the use of hot water for
preparing baby formula.
iii)
Explain that boiling water does not reduce lead levels.
iv) Discuss other options consumers can take
to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water, such as alternative sources or
water treatment.
v) Suggest that
parents have their child's blood tested for lead.
BOARD NOTE: The supplier must use text providing the
information this (a)(1)(D) describes.
E) Explain why there are elevated levels of
lead in the supplier's drinking water (if known) and what the supplier is doing
to reduce the lead levels in homes and buildings in this area.
BOARD NOTE: The supplier must use text providing the
information this (a)(1)(E) describes.
F) For more information, call us at [INSERT
THE SUPPLIER'S NUMBER] [(IF APPLICABLE), or visit our Web site at [INSERT THE
SUPPLIER'S WEB SITE HERE]]. For more information on reducing lead exposure
around your home/building and the health effects of lead, visit USEPA's Web
site at
www.epa.gov/lead or contact your
health care provider.
G)
Information on Lead Service Lines. A supplier having lead service lines must
discuss opportunities to replace lead service lines and explain how a consumer
may access the supplier's lead service line inventory to determine whether the
consumer has a lead service line. The supplier must include information on
programs providing financing solutions to assist property owners in replacing
their portion of a lead service line, with a statement that the water system
must replace the supplier-owned portion of a lead service line when the
property owner notifies the supplier that the consumer will replace the
property owners portion of the lead service line.
2) Community Water Systems. In addition to
including the elements subsection (a)(1) specifies, a CWS supplier must include
two information items:
A) The supplier must
tell consumers how to get their water tested; and
B) The supplier must discuss lead in plumbing
components and the difference between low-lead and lead-free components.
BOARD NOTE: At corresponding
40 CFR
141.85(a)(1), USEPA allowed
the State to require prior approval of written public information materials.
Rather than require prior Agency approval, the Board chooses to allow the
Agency to raise any deficiencies that it may perceive using its existing
procedure for review of public education materials. The Agency outlines its
standard practice for review of public information materials: The Agency
provides a comprehensive public education packet to the supplier together with
the notice that the supplier exceeds the lead action level. That packet
includes guidance and templates for the supplier to use in preparing and
distributing its public education materials. The supplier must send a copy of
the public education materials that it distributes to the Agency, and the
Agency reviews the copy of the materials after their distribution to the
public. The Agency directly communicates to the supplier any perceived defects
in the materials. When the Agency perceives minor defects, it will request
correction in future distributions of the public education materials. When the
Agency perceives major defects in the materials, it will request a
redistribution of corrected public education materials the supplier already
distributed.
b) Delivering Public Education Materials
1) The public education materials of a
supplier serving a large proportion of non-English-speaking consumers must
contain information in the appropriate languages regarding the importance of
the notice, or the materials must contain a telephone number or address where a
water consumer may contact the supplier to obtain a translated copy of the
public education materials or to request assistance in the appropriate
language.
2) A CWS supplier
exceeding the lead action level on the basis of tap water samples under Section
611.356 not already conducting
public education tasks under this Section must complete public education tasks
within 60 days after the end of the tap sampling period in which the exceedance
occurred:
A) The CWS supplier must deliver
printed materials complying with subsection (a) to all of its bill-paying
customers.
B) Methods of Delivery
for a CWS Supplier
i) The CWS supplier must
contact customers who are most at risk by delivering education materials
complying with subsection (a) to local public health agencies, even if those
agencies are not located within the supplier's service area, along with an
informational notice encouraging distribution to all of the agencies'
potentially affected customers or the supplier's consumers. The supplier must
contact the local public health agencies directly by phone or in person. The
local public health agencies may provide a specific list of additional
community-based organizations serving the target populations, which may include
organizations outside the service area of the supplier. If local health
agencies provide lists, the supplier must deliver education materials that
comply with subsection (a) to each of the organizations on the provided
lists.
ii) The CWS supplier must
contact customers who are most at risk by delivering materials complying with
subsection (a) to the organizations in subsections (b)(2)(H)(i) through
(b)(2)(H)(vi) that are located within the supplier's service area, along with
an informational notice encouraging distribution to all the organization's
potentially affected customers or supplier's users.
BOARD NOTE: The Board moved the text of
40 CFR
141.85(b)(2)(ii)(B)
(1) through (b)(2)(ii)(B)(6) to appear as
subsections (b)(2)(H)(i) through (b)(2)(H)(vi) to comport with allowed indent
levels.
C) No
less often than quarterly, the CWS supplier must provide information on or in
each water bill as long as the system exceeds the action level for lead. The
message on the water bill must include the verbatim text of the paragraph
below, except replacing the text in brackets with system-specific information:
[INSERT NAME OF SUPPLIER] found high levels of lead in
drinking water in some homes. Lead can cause serious health problems. For more
information please call [INSERT NAME OF SUPPLIER] [or visit (INSERT SUPPLIER'S
WEB SITE HERE)]. The message or delivery mechanism can be modified in
consultation with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, Division of
Public Water Supply; specifically, the Agency may allow a separate mailing of
public education materials to customers if the water system cannot place the
information on water bills.
D) The CWS supplier must post material
complying with subsection (a) on the supplier's Web site if the CWS supplier
serves a population greater than 100,000.
E) The CWS supplier must submit a press
release to newspaper, television, and radio stations.
F) In addition to subsections (b)(2)(A)
through (b)(2)(E), the CWS supplier must implement at least three activities
from one or more of the categories listed below. The supplier must consult with
the Agency to determine the educational content and selection of these
activities.
i) Public service
announcements.
ii) Paid
advertisements.
iii) Public area
information displays.
iv) E-mails
to customers.
v) Public
meetings.
vi) Household
deliveries.
vii) Targeted
individual customer contact.
viii)
Direct material distribution to all multi-family homes and
institutions.
ix) Other
Agency-approved methods.
G) For a CWS supplier that must monitor
annually or less frequently, the end of the tap sampling period is September 30
of the calendar year in which the sampling occurs, or on the last day of an
alternative tap sampling period the Agency sets in a SEP.
H) Organizations That the CWS Supplier Must
Contact When Required to Do So under Subsection (b)(2)(B)(ii)
i) Schools, child care facilities, and school
boards.
ii) Women, Infants and
Children (WIC) and Head Start programs.
iii) Public and private hospitals and medical
clinics.
vi)
Pediatricians.
v) Family planning
clinics.
vi) Local welfare
agencies.
vii)
Obstetricians-gynecologists and midwives.
BOARD NOTE: This subsection (b)(2)(H) derives from
40 CFR
141.85(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1) through
(b)(2)(ii)(B)(7), moved here to comport with
allowed indent levels.
3) As long as a CWS supplier exceeds the
action level, it must repeat the activities in subsection (b)(2), as
subsections (b)(3)(A) through (b)(3)(D) require.
A) The CWS supplier must repeat the tasks in
subsections (b)(2)(A), (b)(2)(B), and (b)(2)(F) every 12 months.
B) The CWS supplier must repeat tasks in
subsection (b)(2)(C) with each billing cycle.
C) The CWS supplier serving a population
greater than 100,000 must post and retain material on a publicly accessible
website under subsection (b)(2)(D).
D) The CWS supplier must repeat the task in
subsection (b)(2)(E) twice every 12 months on a schedule agreed by the Agency
in a SEP. The Agency must, on a case-by-case basis, issue a SEP extending the
time for the supplier to complete the public education tasks in subsection
(b)(2) beyond the 60-day limit if the Agency determines that the supplier needs
the extended time to implement the tasks; however, the Agency must issue the
SEP granting any extension before the 60-day deadline expires.
4) Within 60 days after the end of
the tap sampling period in which a NTNCWS supplier exceeds the lead action
level (unless it already is repeating public education tasks under subsection
(b)(5)), the supplier must deliver the public education materials subsection
(a) specifies.
A) The supplier must deliver
the public education materials by certain means:
i) The NTNCWS supplier must post
informational posters on lead in drinking water in a public place or common
area in each of the buildings the supplier serves; and
ii) The NTNCWS supplier must distribute
informational pamphlets or brochures on lead in drinking water to each person
the NTNCWS supplier serves. The Agency may issue a SEP allowing the system to
use electronic transmission in lieu of or combined with printed materials as
long as the electronic transmission achieves the same or better
coverage.
B) For a
NTNCWS supplier that must monitor annually or less frequently, the end of the
tap sampling period is September 30 of the calendar year in which the sampling
occurs, or on the last day of an alternative tap sampling period the Agency
sets in a SEP.
5) A
NTNCWS supplier must repeat the tasks in subsection (b)(4) at least once during
each calendar year in which the supplier exceeds the lead action level. The
Agency must, on a case-by-case basis, issue a SEP extending the time for the
supplier to complete the public education tasks in subsection (b)(2) beyond the
60-day limit if the Agency determines that the extended time is needed for
implementation purposes; however, the Agency must issue any SEP granting any
extension before the 60-day deadline expires.
6) A supplier may stop delivering public
education materials after the supplier does not exceed the lead action level
during the most recent six-month tap monitoring cycle under Section 611.356.
The supplier must begin public education anew under this Section if the
supplier subsequently exceeds the lead action level during any tap sampling
period.
7) A CWS supplier may apply
to the Agency, in writing, to use only the text in subsection (a)(1) in lieu of
the text in subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) and to perform the tasks in
subsections (b)(4) and (b)(5) in lieu of the tasks in subsections (b)(2) and
(b)(3) under specific circumstances:
A) The
supplier is a facility, such as a prison or a hospital, where the population
served is not capable of or is prevented from making improvements to plumbing
or installing point of use treatment devices; and
B) The supplier provides water as part of the
cost of services provided, not separately charging for water
consumption.
8) A CWS
supplier serving 3,300 or fewer people may limit certain aspects of its public
education programs:
A) For notice under
subsection (b)(2)(F), a supplier serving 3,300 or fewer people must implement
at least one of the activities in that subsection.
B) For notice under subsection (b)(2)(B), a
supplier serving 3,300 or fewer people may limit the distribution of the public
education materials to facilities and organizations that pregnant women and
children are most likely to visit.
C) For notice under subsection (b)(2)(E), the
Agency may issue a SEP waiving this requirement for a supplier serving 3,300 or
fewer persons, as long as the supplier distributes notices to every household
the supplier serves.
c) Supplemental Monitoring and Notification
of Results. A supplier failing to meet the lead action level in tap samples
under Section 611.356 must offer to sample the
tap water of any customer requesting it. The supplier needs not pay for
collecting or analyzing the sample, nor must the supplier itself collect and
analyze the sample.
d) Requirement
for Consumer Notice of Tap Water Monitoring Results
1) Consumer Notice Requirement. A supplier
must provide a notice of the individual tap results from lead tap water
monitoring under Section
611.356 to the persons the water
system serves at the specific sampling site from which the supplier took the
sample (e.g., the occupants of the building where the supplier sampled the
tap).
2) Timing of Consumer Notice.
The supplier must provide the consumer notice as soon as practicable but no
later than the specified timeframe:
A) For
individual samples not exceeding 15 µg/L of lead, no later than 30 days
after the supplier learns of the tap monitoring results.
B) For individual samples exceeding 15
µg/L of lead, as soon as practicable but no later than three calendar
days after the supplier learns of the tap monitoring results. A supplier
choosing to mail the notification must post those letters so they receive
postmarks within the three days.
3) Content of Consumer Notice. The consumer
notice must include the results of lead tap water monitoring for the tap the
supplier tested, an explanation of the health effects of lead, a list of steps
consumers can take to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water, and contact
information for the water utility. The notice must also provide the maximum
contaminant level goal and the action level for lead and the definitions for
these two terms from Section
611.883(c).
4) Delivery of Consumer Notice
A) For tap sampling lead results not
exceeding 15 µg/L, the supplier must provide the consumer notice to
persons it serves at the tap the supplier sampled, by mail or by another method
the Agency approves in a SEP. For example, upon Agency approval, a NTNCWS
supplier could post the results on a bulletin board in the facility enabling
users to review the information.
B)
For tap sampling lead results exceeding 15 µg/L, the supplier must
provide consumer notice to persons it serves at the tap the supplier sampled;
the supplier must provide this notice electronically or by phone, hand
delivery, mail, or another method the Agency approves in a SEP.
e) Notice of Known or
Potential Service Line Containing Lead
1)
Notice requirements. A supplier having lead, galvanized requiring replacement,
or lead status unknown service lines in their inventory under Section
611.354(a) must
inform all persons the supplier serves through a lead, galvanized requiring
replacement, or lead status unknown service line.
2) Timing of notice. A supplier must provide
the initial notice within 30 days after completing the lead service line
inventory Section 611.354 requires and annually
repeat the notice to each person the supplier serves until the supplier's
entire service connection is no longer a lead, galvanized requiring
replacement, or lead status unknown service line. For each new customer, the
supplier must also provide the notice when the supplier initiates
service.
3) Notice Content
A) Persons the Supplier Serves Through a
Confirmed Lead Service Line. The notice must state that the supplier serves the
person through a lead service line; explain the health effects of lead in a way
complying with subsection (a)(1)(B); give steps persons at the service
connection can take to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water; inform about
opportunities to replace lead service lines, including programs providing
financing solutions to assist property owners to replace the customer-owned
portion of a lead service line; and explain that the supplier must replace the
supplier-owned portion of a lead service line when the property owner notifies
the supplier that the owner will replace the customer-owned portion of the lead
service line.
B) Persons the
Supplier Serves Through a Galvanized Requiring Replacement Service Line. The
notice must state that the supplier serves the person through a galvanized
requiring replacement service line, explain the health effects of lead in a way
complying with subsection (a)(1)(B), give steps persons at the service
connection can take to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water, and inform
about opportunities to replace the service line.
C) Persons the Supplier Serves Through a Lead
Status Unknown Service Line. The notice must state that the supplier serves the
person through a lead status unknown service line (a service line whose
material is unknown but may be lead), explain the health effects of lead in a
way complying with subsection (a)(1)(B), give steps persons at the service
connection can take to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water, and inform
about opportunities to verify the material of the service line.
4) Delivery. The supplier must
provide notice to persons the supplier serves at the service connection with a
lead, galvanized requiring replacement, or lead status unknown service line, by
mail or using another method the Agency approves in a SEP.
f) Notice Due to Disturbing a Service Line
Known to or Potentially Containing Lead
1) A
supplier disturbing a lead, galvanized requiring replacement, or lead status
unknown service line by a water shutoff or bypass to the service line, such as
operating a valve on the service line or meter setter, without partially or
fully replacing the lead service line must inform the persons the supplier
serves through the service connection about the potential for an elevated lead
concentration in their drinking water due to the supplier disturbing the
service line, including instructions for flushing to remove particulate lead.
The supplier must comply with this subsection (f)(1) before returning the
affected service line to service.
2) If a supplier disturbs a lead, galvanized
requiring replacement, or lead status unknown service line while replacing an
inline water meter, a water meter setter, or gooseneck, pigtail, or connector,
the supplier must inform the persons the supplier serves through the service
connection about the potential for an elevated lead concentration in their
drinking water due to the supplier disturbing the service line, provide public
education materials complying with subsection (a), a pitcher filter or
point-of-use treatment device to reduce lead, use instructions, and six months
of replacement filter cartridges. The supplier must comply with this subsection
(f)(2) before returning the affected service line to service.
3) A supplier partially or fully replacing a
lead service line must follow applicable procedures in Section
611.354(d)(1)(A) through (d)(1)(D) or (e)(1)(A)
through (e)(1)(D).
g) Information for Persons the Supplier
Serves Through a Service Line Known to or Potentially Containing Lead When the
Supplier Exceeds the Lead Trigger Level
1)
Content. A supplier having lead service lines and exceeding the lead trigger
level of 10 µg/L must inform persons the supplier serves through a lead,
galvanized requiring replacement, or lead status unknown service line about the
supplier's lead service line replacement program and opportunities for
replacing the customer's lead service line.
2) Timing. The supplier must inform persons
it serves within 30 days after the end of the tap sampling period during which
the supplier exceeded the lead trigger level. The supplier must continue to
annually inform the persons it serves until the results of sampling under
Section 611.356 do not exceed the lead
trigger level.
3) Delivery. The
supplier must inform the persons it serves through a lead, galvanized requiring
replacement, or lead status unknown service line by mail or another method the
Agency approves in a SEP.
h) Outreach Activities for Failing to Fulfill
the Lead Service Line Replacement Goal
1) In
the first year after a CWS supplier serving more than 10,000 persons does not
fulfill its required annual lead service line replacement goal under Section
611.354(f), the
supplier must conduct one outreach activity from among those in subsections
(h)(1)(A) through (h)(1)(B). The supplier must annually conduct an outreach
activity under this subsection (h)(1) until the supplier fulfills its
replacement goal or until tap sampling shows that its 90th percentile lead
concentration does not exceed the trigger level of 10 µg/L for two
consecutive tap monitoring cycles:
A) Send
certified mail to customers the supplier serves through a lead or galvanized
requiring replacement service line to inform them about the supplier's
goal-based program for replacing lead service lines and opportunities for
replacing the customer's service line.
B) Conduct a townhall meeting.
C) Participate in a community event providing
information about the supplier's program for replacing lead service lines and
distribute public education materials whose content complies with subsection
(a).
D) Contact customers by phone,
text message, email, or door hanger.
E) Use another method the Agency approves in
a SEP to discuss the supplier's program for replacing lead service lines and
opportunities for replacing the customer's lead service line.
2) Following the first year after
the supplier exceeds the lead trigger level, a supplier still failing to
fulfill its goal for replacing lead service lines must conduct one activity
from subsection (h)(1) and two additional outreach activities each year from
among those in subsections (h)(2)(A) through (h)(2)(D):
A) Conduct social media campaign.
B) Conduct outreach via newspaper,
television, or radio.
C) Contact
organizations representing plumbers and contractors by mail providing
information about lead in drinking water, including health effects, sources of
lead, and the importance of using lead-free plumbing materials.
D) Visit targeted customers to discuss the
supplier's program for replacing lead service lines and opportunities for
replacing the customers' lead service lines.
3) The supplier may stop outreach activities
when tap sampling shows that its 90th percentile lead concentration no longer
exceeds the trigger level of 10 µg/L for two consecutive tap monitoring
cycles or when all customers the supplier serves through lead or galvanized
requiring replacement service lines refuse to participate in replacing the
customer-owned portion under the supplier's program for replacing lead service
lines. Under this subsection (h)(3), a refusal includes a customer-signed
statement refusing to participate in replacing the customer-owned portion of
the lead service line or supplier-generated documents memorializing the
customer's verbal refusal or non-response after two good faith attempts by the
supplier to reach the customer.
i) Public Education to Local and State Health
Agencies
1) Find-and-Fix Results. A CWS
supplier must inform the Department of Public Health and local health agencies
about its find-and-fix activities under Section
611.352(j),
including the location of the tap sample sites exceeding 15 µg/L, the
results from initial tap samples, the results from follow-up tap samples, the
results from water quality parameter monitoring, and any distribution system
management actions or corrosion control treatment adjustments the supplier
made.
2) Timing and Content. A CWS
supplier must annually send copies of the public education materials the
supplier provided under subsections (a) and (h)(1) during a calendar year no
later than July 1 of the following year.
3) Delivery. The CWS supplier must send the
public education materials and find-and-fix information to the Department of
Public Health and local health agencies by mail or by another method the Agency
approves in a SEP.
j)
Public Education for Small Supplier Compliance Flexibility POU Devices
1) Content. A small CWS or NTNCWS supplier
implementing the POU device option under Section
611.363 must provide public
education materials to inform users how to properly use POU devices to maximize
the units' effectiveness in reducing the lead concentration in drinking
water.
2) Timing. The supplier must
provide its public education materials when the supplier delivers the POU
device.
3) Delivery. The supplier
must provide its public education materials in person, by mail, or another
method the Agency approves in a SEP, to persons at the locations where the
supplier delivers the POU devices.
BOARD NOTE: This Section derives from
40 CFR
141.85.