Dear Customer,
On behalf of the over 1000 women and men who work every day to provide you with excellent drinking water, I am happy to present this year’s annual water quality report. You can be sure that the reliability and safety of your drinking water is our top priority.
This report provides you with the results of our drinking water testing for 2023. Our staff conduct hundreds of thousands of tests each year to ensure that your water is safe.
Our state-of-the-art surveillance system monitors your water every step of the way from the reservoir all the way to your kitchen tap. Once again, MWRA met every federal and state standard and the quality of your drinking water is excellent.
Every day, we see news stories about PFAS—or ‘forever chemicals’—in drinking water. Because our source water is so well protected, the water we deliver to you meets the current state, as well as the new federal EPA standards issued in April, with levels so low they cannot be quantified.
MWRA continues to be a leader in working to reduce the risk of lead in drinking water. System-wide, we remain below the Lead Action Level. Since 2016, we have provided $41 million in zero-interest loans to 17 communities for full lead service line removals. Please read your community’s letter on page 7 for more information on your local water system, and consider replacing your lead service line if your home has one.
While 2023 was a wet year, as stewards of these reservoirs, we know how precious a resource we have and we cannot afford to waste it. It is an exciting time to be working at MWRA as we continue to maintain and modernize the regional system begun over 175 years ago, while providing a vital service every day.
Please take a moment to read this report. We want you to have the same confidence in the water we deliver to your homes and businesses as we do. Please contact us with any questions or comments about your water quality, or any of MWRA’s programs.
Frederick A. Laskey
Executive Director
For more information on MWRA and its Board of Directors, visit www.mwra.com
Where To Go For Further Information
Massachusetts Water Resources Authority, 617-242-5323 www.mwra.com
Providing Safe Drinking Water, From Watershed To Workplace
For over 175 years, water professionals have been working to build, maintain and operate the regional system that provides a reliable safe supply of drinking water to your community.
Today, MWRA professionals work to ensure the delivery of safe, pure water for your home, school or business, 24/7/365. Our staff collaborate with water departments in 53 communities, to ensure the continuing delivery of safe drinking water to 2.5 million people at their homes and businesses.
This annual MWRA drinking water quality report for 2023 provides information on how we work to provide high quality water to your community and to you.
MWRA staff work with staff at your community, the Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR), and state and federal health professionals and regulators to provide and protect your drinking water. From the 400 square mile forest covered watersheds, to billions of gallons of water in the reservoirs, through treatment and thousands of miles of pipelines, and finally to your drinking water faucet, MWRA’s water experts conduct hundreds of thousands of tests on your water every year. Keeping the water safe is a continuous process, from watershed to water tap. MWRA’s staff across our entire organization carry out the work needed to protect your water.
Protected At The Source…
The water MWRA and your community provide to your home or business starts with our two pristine reservoirs in central Massachusetts — the Quabbin Reservoir, 65 miles from Boston, and the Wachusett Reservoir, 35 miles from Boston. Combined, these two reservoirs provide an average of 200 million gallons of pure, highly protected, high quality water each day. The Ware River provides additional water when needed.
Your Annual Water Quality Report This annual water quality report provides consumers of MWRA water with important information on water quality. MWRA also has monthly water quality reports, information on specific potential contaminants, water system updates, and more at www.mwra.com. We welcome your questions at 617-242-5323 or Ask.MWRA@mwra.com.
The Quabbin and Wachusett watersheds—areas that drain water to the reservoirs—are naturally protected. More than 85% of the land is covered with forests and wetlands, which filter the rain and snow that enter the streams that flow to the reservoirs. This water comes in contact
with soil, rock, plants, and other material as it follows its natural path to the reservoirs. Thisprocess helps to clean the water, but it also can dissolve and carry very small amounts of material into the reservoir. Minerals and rock do not typically cause problems in the water. Water can also transport contaminants, including naturally occurring minerals or radioactive material, and bacteria, viruses or other potential pathogens from human and animal activity that can cause illness. Testing results show that few contaminants are found in the reservoir water, and those few are in very small amounts well below EPA’s treatment standards.
MWRA and DCR work together to implement our nationally recognized watershed protection program. The Department of Environmental Protection’s (MassDEP) Source Water Assessment report for the Quabbin and Wachusett Reservoirs commended DCR and MWRA for our source water protection plans. The report states that our “watershed protection programs are very successful and greatly reduce the actual risk of contamination.” MWRA and DCR follow the report recommendations to maintain the pristine watershed areas and high quality source water. For more information on our source water, go to: www.mwra.com/sourcewater.html.
Water: Tested From The Source…
DCR biologists and environmental scientists sample the streams that feed the reservoirs to identify and resolve potential pollution sources, and to monitor water quality trends. MWRA and DCR scientists sample and analyze water in the reservoirs, and use specialized monitoring buoys to remotely and continuously monitor the reservoirs. Based on this information, MWRA operators can make key decisions on how to manage the Wachusett and Quabbin reservoirs. A key, initial test for reservoir water quality leaving the reservoirs is turbidity, or cloudiness. Turbidity refers to the amount of suspended particles in the water and can impair water disinfection. All water must be below 5 NTU (nephelometric turbidity units), and water can only be above 1 NTU if it does not interfere with effective disinfection. In 2023, typical levels in the Wachusett Reservoir were 0.27 NTU, and highest level was only 0.49 NTU.
MWRA also tests water for potential disease-causing organisms, including fecal coliform bacteria, and parasites such as Giardia and Cryptosporidium, that can enter the water from animal or human waste. All test results for the reservoir water were well within state and federal testing and treatment standards. Learn more about MWRA test results for waterborne contaminants and their potential health impacts at: www.mwra.com.
How We Treat Your Water
MWRA’s Brutsch Water Treatment Facility, located in Ware, provides state of the art treatment and monitoring of your water. Well trained and
licensed operators add measured doses of
treatment chemicals to improve the quality of
your water. Water treatment includes:
Ultraviolet light (UV), a similar but more powerful form of natural disinfection than sunlight, renders pathogens non-infectious.
Chlorine disinfects the water, killing bacteria, viruses and other organisms, and protects the water as it travels through miles of pipeline to your home.
Each community treats the water to reduce the leaching of lead from home plumbing.
Chicopee performs additional booster disinfection at the point where the local pipes take water from the MWRA aqueduct.
After we treat your water, MWRA operators and environmental quality staff test it as it leaves the treatment plant, and as it travels towards your home, as required by EPA and state regulations. MWRA sampling teams, and chemists and biologists at MWRA’s four laboratories conduct hundreds of thousands of tests per year for over 120 contaminants. A complete list is available on mwra.com. The results for 2023 are shown in the table below. They confirm the quality and safety of the water your community receives from MWRA.
Your Water Wins Awards
The MWRA received an award from Mass DEP for outstanding performance in 2023..
MWRA Monitoring for PFAS
PFAS, or per- and polyfluoralkyl substances, used since the 1940’s for many purposes from stain and water proofing to firefighting, continue to be a national concern. Due to our well protected sources, tests of MWRA water show only trace amounts of these compounds, well below the state PFAS6 standard of 20 parts per trillion. MWRA also meets the new EPA standards announced in April 2024. See www.mwra.com for more details.
Working With Your Community To Test Your Water
Water conditions can change within your town’s
distribution system. Water department staff in each community test for contaminants that can vary within community pipes. MWRA staff work with local water departments to sample and test water each week for total coliform bacteria. Total coliform bacteria can come from the intestines of warm-blooded animals, or can be found in soil, plants, or other places. Most of the time, they are not harmful. However, their presence could signal that harmful bacteria from fecal waste may be there as well. If total coliform is detected in more than 5% of water samples in a month, the water system is required to investigate the possible source and fix any identified problems. No CVA community exceeded the total coliform trigger in 2023. If a water sample does test positive, our laboratory staff run a more specific test for E. coli, a bacteria found in human and animalfecal waste which may cause illness. No E. coli was found in any CVA community water in 2023.
MWRA Coliform Assessment
Coliforms are bacteria that are naturally present iin the environment and are used as an indicator that other, potentially harmful, waterborne pathogens may be present, or that a potential pathway exists through which contamination may enter the drinking water distribution system. In September 2023, we found coliforms at one sample tap indicating the need to look for potential problems in water treatment or distribution. When this occurs, we are required to take additional samples and to conduct an assessment to identify and correct problems found during the assessment. No positive samples were identified in the follow up samples at community entry locations. We completed the Level 1 assessment, which identified potential issues with the sampling tap, and submitted it to MassDEP. We modified our sampling procedures to reduce the risk of stagnant water affecting results.
Maintenance and Reliability
MWRA continues to invest in consistent, reliable, water treatment. During 2024, portions of the chlorination equipment at the Brutsch Water
Treatment Facility will be upgraded. Your community is investing in reliability as well. MWRA provides zero-interest loans to communities for pipeline rehabilitation and other water quality improvements. During 2023, we loaned $50 million to 17 communities for pipeline
projects. Additional information on local projects can be seen on page 7.
Water Quality After Treatment 2023
Compound
Units
(MCL)
Highest Level Allowed
(We Found)
Detected Level-Average
Range of Detections
(MCLG)
Ideal Goal
Violation
How It Gets in the Water
Barium
ppm
2
0.006
0.005 - 0.006
2
No
Common mineral in nature
Nitrate
ppm
10
0.009
0 - 0.009
10
No
Atmospheric deposition
Water Quality in Community Systems
Local Tests for 2023
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs) in ppb
MCL = 80 ppb (Avg)
Halocetic Acids
(HAA5) in ppb
MCL = 60 ppb (Avg)
Chlorine in ppm
MRDL = 4 ppm (Avg)
MRDLG = 4 ppm
Sodium in ppm
Annual Average
Range
Annual Average
Range
Annual Average
Range
Highest Level
Chicopee
52.7
29.1–55.4
42.6
16.3–35.5
0.55
0.14 - 0.98
13.5
South Hadley FD #1
65.5
31.8–84.9*
23.8
13.2–25.7
0.37
0.01 - 1.05
7.3
Wilbraham
59.7
31.6–58.2
21.1
2.7–23.3
0.36
0.20 - 1.04
7.2
Key: MCL=Maximum Contaminant Level. The highest level of a contaminant allowed in water. MCLs are set as close to the MCLGs as feasible using the best available technology.MCLG=Maximum Contaminant Level Goal: 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. ^The maximum result is reported for nitrate, not the average. MRDL=Maximum Residual Disinfectant Level. 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. MRDLG=Maximum Residual Disinfectant Level Goal. The level of a drinking water disinfectant below which there is no known or expected health risk. MRDLGs do not reflect the benefits of the use of disinfectants to control microbial contamination. TTHMs and HAA5 are byproducts of disinfection. * - Annual average meets TTHM MCL ppm=parts per million. ppb=parts per billion.
Working To Keep Lead Out Of Drinking Water
The water from MWRA’s reservoirs is free of lead. Lead can be found, however, in your home piping system and in your business drinking water. Learn about the health impacts of lead and how to reduce exposure to this toxic metal. Lead affects young children and may cause damage to the brain, slow growth and development, and create learning and behavior problems. Preventing lead exposure is particularly important if a pregnant woman or a child lives in your home or apartment. Lead can also impact the health of your entire family. While lead poisoning frequently comes from exposure to lead paint chips or dust, lead in drinking water can also contribute to total lead exposure.
What is An Action Level?
An Action Level is the amount of lead that requires action to reduce exposure. If your home or school’s drinking water is above the lead Action Level, additional steps to reduce lead may be required. If more than 10% of your community’s samples were over the lead Action Level, your local water department is taking action to address the problem.
How Lead Enters Drinking Water
Lead in your home plumbing, or a lead service line, can contribute to elevated lead levels in the water you drink. MWRA’s water is lead-free when it leaves our reservoirs. Water mains that provide water to your community are made are mostly made of iron, steel or concrete, and do not add lead to the water. Lead can enter your tap water from your service line -the line that connects your home to the water main- if it is made of lead, lead solder used in plumbing, or from some older brass faucets.
3 Ways to Reduce Lead in Your Water
Remove your lead service line
Run your water before using
Use a filter certified to remove lead
Corrosion, or wearing away of lead-based materials, can add lead to tap water, especially if water sits in the pipes for a long time before it is used. MWRA’s licensed treatment operators adjust the water’s pH and buffering capacity by adding sodium carbonate and carbon dioxide to the water. This treatment makes water less corrosive and reduces leaching of lead into drinking water. Lead levels found in tests of tap water have dropped by nearly 90% since we made this treatment change in 1996. Learn more about lead in drinking water at www.mwra.com
Local Tests for Lead and Copper
Lead in ppb
AL = 15 ppb MCLG = 0
Copper in ppb
AL = 1300 ppb MCLG = 0
# Samples over AL
90% Value
# Samples over AL
90% Value
Chicopee*
0
1.4
0
127
South Hadley FD #1^
3
8.87
0
50
Wilbraham*
0
8.22
0
84.9
AL = Action Level - The concentration of a contaminant which, if exceeded, triggers treatment or other requirements which a water system must follow. ppb = parts per billion *Sampled in 2021 ^Sampled in 2022
.
CVA Communities Meet Lead Standard
Under EPA and DEP rules, your local water department is required to test tap water in homes likely to be at risk for high lead levels, such as homes with lead solder, so the results do not reflect lead levels in every home. The EPA Lead and Copper Rule requires that 9 out of 10
homes tested (90%) must have lead levels below the Action Level of 15 parts per billion (ppb).This testing process can provide information on whether lead is corroding and mixing with the drinking water. It also provides communities and you with information on how to reduce
lead in your drinking water. All three of the CVA communities meet the lead Action Level.
Important EPA Information On Lead
If present, elevated levels of lead can cause serious health problems, especially for pregnant women and young children. Lead in drinking water comes primarily from materials and components associated with service lines and home plumbing. MWRA is responsible for providing high quality drinking water, but cannot control the variety of materials used in plumbing components. If your water has been sitting for several hours, you can minimize the potential for lead exposure by flushing your tap for 30 seconds to 2 minutes before using water for drinking or cooking. If you are concerned about lead in your water, you may wish to have your water tested. Information on lead in drinking water, testing methods, and steps you can take to minimize exposure is available from the Safe Drinking Water Hotline at 1-800-426-4791 or www.epa.gov/safewater/lead.
Did you know?
The word "plumbing" originally came from the Latin word for lead - plumbum.
Lead Service Lines A service line connects your home or building to the water main in the street. If yours is made of lead, it can be the main source of lead in your tap water. Older galvanized iron pipes with lead connectors (“goosenecks”) can also release lead. Lead service lines should be removed entirely to reduce lead in your drinking water.
Working To Replace Lead Service Lines To help replace lead service lines, MWRA and its Advisory Board offer zero-interest loans to member communities. Each MWRA community can develop its own local plan, and many communities have already taken steps to remove lead service lines. Since 2016, MWRA has provided $41 million to 17 communities to replace lead service lines. Your local water department staff can help you find out if you have a lead service line, and provide help in replacing it. In some cases, an onsite check is necessary to determine the specific piping to your building.
Many communities have online maps. You can also see if your service line is made of lead by scratching the pipe near your water meter with a key or other metal object. Lead pipes will show a dull grey color, while copper pipes will not. For an online how-to guide, go to www.epa.gov/pyt.
Lead Testing in Schools
Children can consume much of their drinking water at school or childcare. Plumbing there may contain lead and contribute to lead exposure. MWRA, in coordination with MassDEP, provides no-cost lab analysis and technical assistance for schools and childcare centers in MWRA communities. Since 2016, MWRA’s laboratory staff have conducted over 40,000 tests for 576 schools and childcares in 44 communities. Results are available on the MassDEP website at: www.mass. gov/dep (search for “lead in schools”).
Results are available on the MassDEP website at: www.mass.gov/dep (search for “lead in schools”). You may also contact your local school or water department for results.
How to Test Your Drinking Water
If you are concerned about lead piping in your home, contact your local water department about testing for lead in your drinking water. MWRA also maintains a list of certified laboratories and sampling instructions on our website at www.mwra.com. You may also call MWRA at 617-242-5323.
Steps To Reduce Lead In Your Home Or Office
Find out if you have a lead service line, and get it replaced.
Let water run before using it - fresh water is better than stale.
Any time water has not been used for more than 6 hours, run the faucet used for drinking water or cooking for at least one minute or until after the water runs cold. To save water, fill a pitcher with fresh water and place it in the refrigerator for future use.
Never use hot water from the faucet for drinking or cooking, especially when making baby formula or other food for infants or young children.
Remove loose lead solder and debris. Every few months, remove the aerator from each faucet and flush the pipes for 3 to 5 minutes.
Be careful of places where you may find lead in or near your home. Paint, soil, dust and pottery may contain lead. Call the Massachusetts Department of Public Health at 1-800-532-9571 or 1-800-424-LEAD for information on lead and health impacts.
Leading By Example On Climate Change
MWRA energy managers have helped reduce MWRA’s energy use and produce more green energy. We have reduced our greenhouse gas emissions by over 40% and were awarded the Massachusetts Leading by Example Award in 2023.
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 EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Hotline (1-800-426-4791) or MWRA. In order to ensure that tap water is safe to drink, MassDEP and the EPA prescribe regulations which limit the amount of certain contaminants in water provided by public water systems. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH) regulations establish limits for contaminants in bottled water, which must provide the same protection for public health.
Important Health Information: Drinking Water and People with Weakened Immune Systems
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 system 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. EPA/CDC guidelines on appropriate means to lessen the risk of infection by Cryptosporidium and other microbial contaminants are available from the EPA’s
Safe Drinking Water Hotline (1-800-426-4791).
Important Research For New Regulations
MWRA works with EPA and health research organizations to help define new national drinking water standards by collecting data on water contaminants that are not yet regulated. Very few of these potential contaminants are found in MWRA water due to our source water protection efforts. Detailed information on testing for unregulated contaminants, as well as data on PFAS, disinfection by-products, Giardia and Cryptosporidium, and other contaminants can be found at mwra.com, search for UCMR.
Prevent Cross-Connections Your water department staff work to prevent cross-connections that may allow harmful organisms or other contaminants to contaminate your water if a backflow occurs.
Backflow sources could include:
Garden hoses or swimming pools
Boilers
Irrigation systems or wells
Residential fire protection systems
MassDEP recommends you install backflow prevention devices for inside and outside hose connections to protect the drinking water in your home and community. For more information on cross-connections, please call 617-242-5323 or visit www.mwra.com.
The Chicopee Public Water System has been a member of the MWRA since the completion of the Chicopee Valley Aqueduct in 1950. We are grateful to receive such high quality source water from Quabbin Reservoir.
Chicopee provides additional treatment to MWRA
water from the Brustch Water Treatment Plant.
Chicopee now uses sodium hypochlorite (instead
of chlorine gas) as a disinfectant. This change
was made to increase safety for the treatment
plant operators and residents.
The Chicopee Corrosion Control Facility provides
excellent water quality by adjusting the water’s
pH and alkalinity with sodium carbonate and
sodium bicarbonate (baking soda). A phosphate
blend adds extra protection by reducing corrosion
throughout the system. These treatments reduce
levels of dissolved metals such as lead, copper,
and iron in the city’s water supply.
Under the Safe Drinking Water Act, water samples
must be tested for lead and copper. The water’s
chemistry is adjusted to minimize corrosion well
before it reaches home plumbing. Piping materials such as lead solder or lead service lines can add
lead to household water. In 2021, 30 lead and
copper samples were collected. The Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) has reduced the number
of samples we must samples collect due to our
successful maintenance of low to absent levels
of lead and copper. Results were below both the
lead and copper Action Levels. The next round of
lead and copper samples will be collected in the
summer of 2024.
Chicopee has made various water system
upgrades and additions in 2023. Approximately
1800 feet of 12” ductile iron pipe, 3800 feet of
24” ductile iron pipe, and 12 new fire hydrants
were installed on James Street, as well as 5
new fire hydrants and 14 new domestic services
elsewhere in the city. These system upgrades
have improved the flow capacity and fire
protection, and improved redundancy in the
system by eliminating aging infrastructure.
Chicopee continued its modernization program
for residential and commercial meters. In 2023,
we repaired 20 leaking services and 6 large
water main breaks. We continue to work through
staffing shortages to deliver safe drinking water
of the highest quality.
Chicopee has a back flow and cross connection
program to enforce the MassDEP mandate to
prevent contamination due to backpressure
or backsiphonage. We surveyed commercial,
industrial, municipal, and institutional facilities
to identify and eliminate potential cross
connections. When a possible cross connection
is found or new plumbing is installed, devices
such as a double check or “RPZ” (reduced
pressure zone) valves are installed to eliminate
the hazard. These devices are tested annually or
more by certified testers. Among the 1100 back
flow devices, 3 devices failed were repaired by
owners within 14 days. Public education flyers
are distributed in the water bill annually. If you
have any questions, please contact the Cross
Connection Department at (413) 594-1870.
For more information on your drinking water, or to find out about public meetings, please go to our website at: www.chicopeema.gov or call us at (413) 594-3420.
South Hadley Fire District #1
PWS #1275000
Fire District No. 1 has been fortunate to be one of the original communities to join the MWRA system back in 1951. We purchase 100% of our water from the MWRA. We purchase 100% of our water
from the MWRA, which performs all of our water
quality testing and has an exceptional support
staff for all aspects of water quality.
Our water is treated for bacteria utilizing
ultraviolet (UV) light for primary disinfection and
sodium hypochlorite for primary and secondary
disinfection at MWRA’s Brutsch Water Treatment
Facility in Belchertown. Corrosion control
and emergency chlorination are done at our
treatment facility located on Fuller St. in Ludlow
Sodium silicate is added for corrosion control,
to reduce lead levels, and to comply with the
federally mandated Lead and Copper Rule.
We use booster chlorination at our Alvord
St. Water Tank seasonally between June and
November to maintain chlorine residuals within
the distribution system.
Our recent Lead and Copper Rule sampling round
was in June 2022, which required testing from
30 residential homes and 2 schools. Our 90th
percentile for lead was 8.87 ppb, below the lead
Action Level of 15 ppb. No samples exceeded
the Action Level for copper. Our next sampling
round will be in June 2025 at 30 homes within
the distribution system and schools and daycare
facilities. We have not found any evidence of lead
or galvanized service lines in our system.
We used approximately 360 million gallons of water
in 2023. This amount was lower than 2022 due to
the exceptionally wet seasons we experienced.
We continue to update our water mains based on
our replacement program. Replacements are
prioritized by leak history, pipe type and the
annual DPW street paving list. This collaboration
results in reduced costs and extended pavement
integrity. We intend to continue replacements as
funding and time permit.
Within our water main replacement program, we
replaced 1700 feet of 4” unlined cast iron main
on Pittroff Avenue with 8” PVC pipe. In addition,
we replaced 300 feet of 8”AC pipe on Graves St.
with PVC and 300 ft of 8” AC pipe on Warner St.
with 8” PVC. Graves and Warner St were upgraded
using a grant the Town received for drainage,
sidewalk and road improvements. These projects
were possible through the coordination of many
town departments for which we are grateful. All
service connections and hydrants on both streets
were also replaced. The new mains will provide
reliability and improved fire protection.
The Water Department – Fire District No.1 has
been operated very efficiently by providing the
rate payers with quality drinking water at the
lowest possible cost. Please view our website for
information about our Department. Our capital
improvement list was recently added outlining our
future projects. Our Board meeting agendas and minutes can be found at www.shdistrict1.org. You can also call our
office at 413-532-0666 or speak to Jeff Cyr, Water
Superintendent at 413-533-4576.
Wilbraham
PWS #133900
The Corrosion Control Facility on Miller Street
in Ludlow continues to operate without issue,
injecting sodium silicate into the drinking water
in compliance with the federally mandated
Lead and Copper Rule (LCR). Lead and copper
sampling was performed by the Wilbraham Water
Department during the summer of 2021 at twenty
residential homes. Our 90th percentile for lead
was 8.22 ppb, well below the Action Level of 15
ppb, and copper at 84.9 ppb, below the Action
Level 1300 ppb. The next round will be this
summer. Asbestos sampling was also performed
with non-detectable (ND) results for two sites in
the summer of 2022. The next round of asbestos
sampling is in 2031.
The Water Department eliminated all
communication instruments within a confined
space pit at the 2.1 million gallon storage tank
located on Bartlett Ave. The new location is an
above ground, temperature controlled cabinet.
Daily maintenance was performed at our
Corrosion Control Facility in Ludlow including
replacing gaskets and valve assemblies on the
Pressure Reducing Valve (PRV), which helped with
adequate operation and flow/pressure control.
The Department repaired several service leaks in
the distribution system by pulling a new service
or performing leak detection to locate and repair
the leaks. Numerous new construction homes
were built with new service connections; and one
6” water main break was repaired on Craigwood
Terrace. We continued installing new water
meters to ensure accurate consumption of each
household and businesses along with installing
remote electronic readers. The water usage for
2023 was 407 million gallons. This represents a 7.4% decrease compared to 2022.
If you would like to learn more about the Wilbraham Water distribution system, or for more information and for the schedule of our monthly Water Commissioners meeting, please visit our website at: www.wilbraham-ma.gov.