Have other water agencies started this testing yet? Does Sweetwater Authority collaborate with other water agencies to share testing methods and best practices?

The EPA’s UCMR rule requires large water agencies like Sweetwater Authority to conduct monitoring for PFAS between 2023 and 2025. Some agencies have not started monitoring yet but will be required to do so under the EPA’s new regulations in 2027. More data on this will become available over time as more agencies begin their monitoring efforts.

Sweetwater Authority’s water supply is different than other agencies as the Authority has more local sources of water than other agencies in the region. Most agencies in the region are already relying mostly on imported water for their drinking water.

Sweetwater Authority does communicate with other agencies to share best practices and testing methodologies and attends trade conferences where PFAS treatment and solutions are discussed.

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1. What is Sweetwater Authority doing to comply with the new EPA standards? Does Sweetwater Authority need to conduct additional testing?
2. Why is the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) updating PFAS standards? What is the new threshold for PFAS? How does it compare to the old threshold? When does Sweetwater Authority need to comply?
3. What were the most recent testing results? Why would there be a fluctuation between the testing results? Why didn’t Sweetwater Authority detect this sooner?
4. What is the difference between California’s notification level and the response level?
5. Does a changing federal administration affect these regulations? Would federal funding cuts impact PFAS treatment efforts?
6. Have other water agencies started this testing yet? Does Sweetwater Authority collaborate with other water agencies to share testing methods and best practices?
7. Would California set standards that are lower than the EPA standards?
8. If Sweetwater isn’t able to comply with the future EPA standards, what are the impacts?