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  2. United States regulation of point source water pollution

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_regulation...

    The Water Quality Act of 1965 required states to issue water quality standards for interstate waters, and authorized the newly created Federal Water Pollution Control Administration to set standards where states failed to do so. No mechanism for federal enforcement was established.

  3. Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropolitan_Water...

    The MWRD operates the largest water reclamation plant in the United States, the Stickney Water Reclamation Plant in Cicero, Illinois, in addition to six other plants and 23 pumping stations. These seven plants range in capacity from 1.44 billion gallons per day at the Stickney Plant to 4 million gallons per day at the Lemont Plant.

  4. Illinois Town's $13 Million Water System Will Remove PFAS - AOL

    www.aol.com/illinois-towns-13-million-water...

    Freeport is a small industrial city of 24,000 in northwest Illinois. For a price tag of $13 million, it's building a new public water system to tap deep into new, uncontaminated water sources.

  5. Chicago area water quality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Area_Water_Quality

    According to Hawthrone (2011), after TARP’s creation and success, the city did little to improve water quality. [3] The issue of water quality was back-seated until the Obama administration ordered an ambitious cleanup of the Chicago River in 2011, later labeled as, "a dramatic step toward improving an urban waterway treated for more than a ...

  6. Water quality law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_quality_law

    Water quality laws govern the protection of water resources for human health and the environment. Water quality laws are legal standards or requirements governing water quality, that is, the concentrations of water pollutants in some regulated volume of water. Such standards are generally expressed as levels of a specific water pollutants ...

  7. Water quality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_quality

    The National Water Quality Inventory Report to Congress is a general report on water quality, providing overall information about the number of miles of streams and rivers and their aggregate condition. [65] The CWA requires states to adopt standards for each of the possible designated uses that they assign to their waters.

  8. Water contamination in Crestwood, Illinois - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_contamination_in...

    The EPA has always done its water quality testing at the supplier. Now, it will test at the distribution point." [89] In the July/August 2009 issue of Illinois Issues, [91] author Bethany Jaeger reports that "because village officials reported that the well served only as an emergency backup, it wasn't required to be tested. And the state ...

  9. Drinking water quality in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drinking_water_quality_in...

    The Safe Drinking Water Act requires the US EPA to set standards for drinking water quality in public water systems (entities that provide water for human consumption to at least 25 people for at least 60 days a year). [3] Enforcement of the standards is mostly carried out by state health agencies. [4]