HomeMy WebLinkAboutDDW-2025-006771
CCR Rule Implementation Guidance 38 Revised April 2013
April 2010
CCR Certification Form
CWS Name:
PWSID No:
The community water system named above hereby confirms that its consumer confidence report has
been distributed to customers (and appropriate notices of availability have been given). Further, the
system certifies that the information contained in the report is correct and consistent with the compliance
monitoring data previously submitted to the state/primacy agency.
Certified by:
Name:
Title:
Phone #: Date:
Please check all items that apply.
☐ CCR was distributed by mail.
Date completed:
☐ CCR was distributed by other direct delivery method. Specify direct delivery methods:
Date completed:
☐ Mail – notification that CCR is available on Web site via a direct uniform resource
locator (URL)
☐ E-mail – direct URL to CCR
☐ E-mail – CCR sent as an attachment to the e-mail
☐ E-mail – CCR sent embedded in the e-mail
☐ Other: ____________________________________
If the CCR was provided by a direct URL, please provide the direct URL Internet address:
www
If the CCR was provided electronically, please describe how a customer requests paper CCR
delivery:
Wasatch Peaks Ranch
UTAH 15044
Nathan Bell
District Manager
801-688-2609 6.27.25
Delivered with digital water bill as a PDF attachment
Paper copies may be requested by emailing info@wprutility.gov
6.27.25
☐ "Good faith" efforts were used to reach non-bill paying consumers. Those efforts included the
following methods as recommended by the state/primacy agency:
Date completed:
☐ posting the CCR on the Internet at www._______________________________________
☐ mailing the CCR to postal patrons within the service area (attach a list of zip codes used)
☐ advertising availability of the CCR in news media (attach copy of announcement)
☐ publication of CCR in local newspaper (attach copy of newspaper announcement)
☐ posting the CCR in public places (attach a list of locations)
☐ delivery of multiple copies to single bill addresses serving several persons such as: apartments,
businesses, and large private employers
☐ delivery to community organizations (attach a list)
☐ electronic city newsletter or electronic community newsletter or listserv (attach a copy of the
article or notice)
☐ (for systems serving at least 100,000 persons) Posted CCR on a publicly accessible Internet
site at the address: www.__________________________________________________
Date completed:
☐ Delivered CCR to other agencies as required by the state/primacy agency (attach a list)
Date completed:
6.27.25
Locations of CCR public postings:
3365 Peaksview Drive, Morgan Utah 84050
5233 Wasatch Peaks Road, Morgan, Utah 84050
4175 North Morgan Valley Drive, Morgane, Utah 84050
Community Organizations Delivered CCR:
Wasatch Peaks Ranch
WPR Homeowners Association
WPRUD Annual Consumer Confidence Report 2024
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2024
Wasatch Peaks Ranch Utility District
Annual Consumer Confidence Report
WPRUD Annual Consumer Confidence Report 2024
2
2024 Water Quality Report for Wasatch Peaks Ranch
Public Water System Number: UTAH 15044
This report covers the drinking water quality for Wasatch
Peaks Ranch for the 2024 calendar year. This information is
a snapshot of the quality of the water that we provided to
you in 2024. Included are details about where your water
comes from, what it contains, and how it compares to
United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA)
and state standards.
Your water comes from two groundwater wells located
north of Wasatch Peaks Ranch along the Weber River.
Groundwater is pumped through a series of water tanks
and booster stations before being treated with
disinfectant. After the disinfection process potable water
is stored in a 1-million-gallon storage tank that supplies
Wasatch Peaks Ranch through a gravity distribution
system.
Wasatch Peaks Ranch Utility District is happy to announce
that your water meets or exceeds both State and Federal
requirements. We are making efforts to continue
protecting our water sources by inspecting our well pump
stations regularly and ensuring source water quality on a
regular basis by routine water sampling.
If you would like to know more about this report, please
contact: Nate Bell, Wasatch Peaks Utility District,
info@wprutility.com.
Contaminants and their presence in water: Drinking water,
including bottled water, may reasonably be expected to
contain at least small amounts of some contaminants. The
presence of contaminants does not necessarily indicate
that water poses a health risk. More information about
contaminants and potential health effects can be obtained
by calling the U.S. EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Hotline (800-
426-4791).
Vulnerability of sub-populations: Some people may be
more vulnerable to contaminants in drinking water than
the general population. Immuno-compromised persons
such as persons with cancer undergoing chemotherapy,
persons who have undergone organ transplants, people
with HIV/AIDS or other immune systems disorders, some
elderly, and infants can be particularly at risk from
infections. These people should seek advice about drinking
water from their health care providers. U.S. EPA/Center for
Disease Control guidelines on appropriate means to lessen
the risk of infection by Cryptosporidium and other
microbial contaminants are available from the Safe
Drinking Water Hotline (800-426-4791).
Sources of drinking water: The sources of drinking water
(both tap water and bottled water) include rivers, lakes,
streams, ponds, reservoirs, springs, and wells. Our water
comes from wells. As water travels over the surface of the
land or through the ground, it dissolves naturally occurring
minerals and, in some cases, radioactive material, and can
pick up substances resulting from the presence of animals
or from human activity.
Contaminants that may be present in source water
include:
• Microbial contaminants, such as viruses and bacteria,
which may come from sewage treatment plants, septic
systems, agricultural livestock operations and wildlife.
• Inorganic contaminants, such as salts and metals,
which can be naturally occurring or result from urban
stormwater runoff, industrial or domestic wastewater
discharges, oil and gas production, mining or farming.
• Pesticides and herbicides, which may come from a
variety of sources such as agriculture and residential
uses.
• Radioactive contaminants, which can be naturally
occurring or be the result of oil and gas production and
mining activities.
• Organic chemical contaminants, including synthetic
and volatile organic chemicals, which are by-products
of industrial processes and petroleum production, and
can also come from gas stations, urban stormwater
runoff, and septic systems.
•
In order to ensure that tap water is safe to drink, the U.S.
EPA prescribes regulations that limit the levels of certain
contaminants in water provided by public water systems.
Federal Food and Drug Administration regulations establish
WPRUD Annual Consumer Confidence Report 2024
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limits for contaminants in bottled water which provide the
same protection for public health.
Water Quality Data
The tables below lists all the drinking water contaminants that we detected during the 2024 calendar year. The presence
of these contaminants in the water does not necessarily indicate that the water poses a health risk. Unless otherwise
noted, the data presented in this table is from testing completed January 1, 2024, through December 31, 2024. The State
allows us to monitor for certain contaminants less than once per year because the concentrations of these contaminants
are not expected to vary significantly from year to year. All the data is representative of the water quality, but some are
more than one year old.
Terms and abbreviations used below:
• Maximum Contaminant Level Goal (MCLG): The level of a contaminant in drinking water below which there is no
known or expected risk to health. MCLGs allow for a margin of safety.
• Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL): The highest level of a contaminant that is allowed in drinking water. MCLs are
set as close to the MCLGs as feasible using the best available treatment technology.
• Maximum Residual Disinfectant Level (MRDL): The highest level of a disinfectant allowed in drinking water. There is
convincing evidence that addition of a disinfectant is necessary for control of microbial contaminants.
• Maximum Residual Disinfectant Level Goal (MRDLG): The level of a drinking water disinfectant below which there is
no known or expected risk to health. MRDLGs do not reflect the benefits of the use of disinfectants to control
microbial contaminants.
• Treatment Technique (TT): A required process intended to reduce the level of a contaminant in drinking water.
• N/A: Not applicable
• ND: not detectable at testing limit
• ppm: parts per million or milligrams per liter
• ppb: parts per billion or micrograms per liter
• ppt: parts per trillion or nanograms per liter
• pCi/l: picocuries per liter (a measure of radioactivity)
• Action Level (AL): The concentration of a contaminant which, if exceeded, triggers treatment or other requirements
that a water system must follow.
• Level 1 Assessment: A study of the water supply to identify potential problems and determine (if possible) why total
coliform bacteria have been found in our water system.
• Level 2 Assessment: A very detailed study of the water system to identify potential problems and determine (if
possible) why an E. coli MCL violation has occurred and/or why total coliform bacteria have been found in our water
system on multiple occasions.
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1Monitoring Data for Regulated Contaminants
Regulated Contaminant MCL, TT, or
MRDL
MCLG or
MRDLG
Level
Detected Range Year
Sampled
Violation
Yes/No Typical Source of Contaminant
Arsenic (mg/l) 0.01 0 0.0006 .0005-
.0007 2024 No
Erosion of natural deposits; Runoff from orchards;
Runoff from glass and electronics production
wastes
Barium (ppm) 2 2 0.186 .161 -
.211 2024 No Discharge of drilling wastes; Discharge of metal
refineries; Erosion of natural deposits
Nitrate (ppm) 10 10 1.15 .9 -
1.41 2024 No Runoff from fertilizer use; Leaching from septic
tanks, sewage; Erosion of natural deposits
Fluoride (ppm) 4 4 .139 .125 -
.153 2024 No
Erosion of natural deposits; Water additive which
promotes strong teeth; Discharge from fertilizer
and aluminum factories
Sodium1 (ppm) N/A N/A 21.5 20.9 -
22.1 2024 No Erosion of natural deposits
TTHM Total Trihalomethanes (ppb) 80 N/A 14.95 11.3 –
18.36 2024 No Byproduct of drinking water disinfection
HAA5 Haloacetic Acids (ppb) 60 N/A 4.85 0 –
4.85 2024 No Byproduct of drinking water disinfection
Chlorine2 (ppm) 4 4 1.23 0.77 -
1.77 2024 No Water additive used to control microbes
Gross Alpha (pCi/L) 15 0 1.555 1.27 -
2.19 2024 No Erosion of natural deposits
Combined radium (pCi/L) 5 0 0.51925 .148 -
.93 2024 No Erosion of natural deposits
Total Coliform TT N/A ND N/A 2024 No Naturally present in the environment
E. coli in the distribution system
(positive samples)
See E. coli
note3 0 ND N/A 2024 No Human and animal fecal waste
Fecal Indicator – E. coli at the
source (positive samples) TT N/A ND N/A 2024 No Human and animal fecal waste
1 Sodium is not a regulated contaminant.
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Inorganic Contaminant Subject to
Action Levels (AL)
Action
Level MCLG Your
Water4
Range
of
Results
Year
Sampled
Number of
Samples
Above AL
Typical Source of Contaminant
Lead (ppb) 15 0 0.0014 ND -
.0059 2024 0
Lead service lines, corrosion of household
plumbing including fittings and fixtures; Erosion of
natural deposits
Copper (ppm) 1.3 1.3 0.0695 .0019 -
.215 2024 0 Corrosion of household plumbing systems;
Erosion of natural deposits
2 The chlorine “Level Detected” was calculated using a running annual average.
3 E. coli MCL violation occurs if: (1) routine and repeat samples are total coliform-positive and either is E. coli-positive, or (2) the supply fails to take all required repeat
samples following E. coli-positive routine sample, or (3) the supply fails to analyze total coliform-positive repeat sample for E. coli.
4 Ninety (90) percent of the samples collected were at or below the level reported for our water.
Information about lead: Lead can cause serious health effects in people of all ages, especially pregnant people, infants (both
formula-fed and breastfed), and young children. Lead in drinking water is primarily from materials and parts used in service lines
and in home plumbing. Wasatch Peaks Ranch Utility District is responsible for providing high quality drinking water and removing
lead pipes but cannot control the variety of materials used in the plumbing in your home. Because lead levels may vary over
time, lead exposure is possible even when your tap sampling results do not detect lead at one point in time. You can help protect
yourself and your family by identifying and removing lead materials within your home plumbing and taking steps to reduce your
family's risk. Using a filter, certified by an American National Standards Institute accredited certifier to reduce lead, is effective in
reducing lead exposures. Follow the instructions provided with the filter to ensure the filter is used properly. Use only cold water
for drinking, cooking, and making baby formula. Boiling water does not remove lead from water. Before using tap water for
drinking, cooking, or making baby formula, flush your pipes for several minutes. You can do this by running your tap, taking a
shower, doing laundry or a load of dishes. If you have a lead service line or galvanized requiring replacement service line, you
may need to flush your pipes for at least 5 minutes to flush water from both your home plumbing and the lead service line. If you
are concerned about lead in your water and wish to have your water tested, contact Wasatch Peaks Ranch Utility District by
email at info@wprutility.com for available resources. Information on lead in drinking water, testing methods, and steps you can
take to minimize exposure is available at https://www.epa.gov/safewater/lead.