EPA Seeks Public Comment On Possible Drinking
Water Contaminants
2/20/2008
Washington, D.C. — EPA is asking for public comment on a list of 104
possible drinking water contaminants that may need to be regulated in the
future to ensure the continued protection of drinking water. Under the Safe
Drinking Water Act, EPA includes on the draft Contaminant Candidate List
(CCL) currently unregulated contaminants that are known or anticipated to
occur in public water systems and which may require regulation. This draft
CCL, which is the third such listing, lists 93 chemical contaminants or
groups and 11 microbes, and describes the process and basis for selecting
these contaminants.
"EPA is casting a broader scientific net for potential regulation of
chemicals and microbes in drinking water," said Assistant Administrator for
Water Benjamin H. Grumbles. "EPA's proposed list of priority contaminants
will advance sound science and public health by targeting research on
certain chemicals and microbes and informing regulators on how best to
reduce risk."
The CCL process was established by the 1996 Amendments to the Safe Drinking
Water Act as a mechanism to determine if new regulations are needed to
protect drinking water. Under this process EPA conducts extensive research
into the occurrence and health effects of the listed contaminants before
issuing new regulations or standards. In developing the draft CCL 3, the
agency implemented a new approach for selecting contaminants which builds
upon evaluations used for previous lists and is based on substantial expert
input early in the process and recommendations from a larger number of
different groups including stakeholders, the National Research Council and
the National Drinking Water Advisory Council.
The draft list includes chemicals used in commerce, pesticides, biological
toxins, disinfection byproducts, and waterborne pathogens. The agency
evaluated approximately 7,500 chemicals and microbes and selected 104
candidates for the final draft list based on their potential to pose health
risks through drinking water exposure. The comment period is open for 90
days beginning the day of publication in the Federal Register.
Information on the CCL 3: epa.gov/safewater/ccl/ccl3.html
SOURCE: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
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