Warwick, Lititz Receive EPA Award for
Protecting Waters
(PHILADELPHIA – December 18, 2012) – The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
today honored two Lancaster County, Pa. communities for protecting sources of
drinking water used by more than 20,000 people. EPA Regional Administrator Shawn
M. Garvin presented the agency’s 2012 regional Source Water Protection Award to
the Warwick Township Municipal Authority and the Borough of Lititz at a ceremony
at the Warwick Municipal Office.
“Protecting the sources of our drinking water
benefits public health, our environment, and our economic well-being as well as
our quality of life,” said Garvin. “Warwick and Lititz have shown the way for
more than a decade of working with farmers and others in taking responsible
steps protecting drinking water supplies.”
The
Source Water Protection Award recognizes organizations and communities that take
extraordinary steps to protect drinking water sources in EPA’s mid-Atlantic
region.
Warwick and Lititz were recognized for their
joint Wellhead Protection Program to protect groundwater sources from
contamination. The communities were nominated for the award by the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Protection.
“DEP is proud to nominate Warwick Township
and Lititz Borough for their approach of working with local farmers,” DEP
South-central Regional Director Lynn Langer said. “They have set the bar high
for protecting drinking water, and hopefully other communities will follow their
example.”
“We
know that in order to protect our sensitive water supply we need to use many
different approaches,” said Dan Zimmerman, Warwick Township Manager.
Sue
Barry, Lititz Borough Manager explained, “We appreciate the willingness of our
partners in the community and state, local and county governments who have
helped to make this program successful.”
The
communities created a steering committee of local stakeholders to guide their
steps, supported state-of-the-art farming techniques and plans, sponsored public
education activities, completed watershed improvement projects, and developed
protective land use planning strategies and emergency water supply
plans.
These steps are designed to deal with high
levels of nutrient pollution in the heavily-agricultural area. More than 30
percent of the public water systems in Lancaster County have nitrate removal
systems installed to assure that water provided to customers meets health-based
standards.
The
communities reported a steady decline in raw water nitrate concentrations for
their drinking water sources, reducing treatment requirements and
expenses.
The
upgrade of the Lititz Sewer Authority’s wastewater treatment plant is helping to
protect local waters and the Chesapeake Bay by significantly reducing nitrogen
and phosphorus discharges to Lititz Run. The plant’s technology is also
producing dried biosolids that are being used by local farmers as a slow release
fertilizer as part of their nutrient management program.
Warwick and Lititz are the first Source Water Protection Award winners
in Pennsylvania since 2009.
The
federal Safe Drinking Water Act requires that states develop EPA-approved
programs to assess all drinking waters sources in the state. These assessments
define land areas contributing water to each public water supply system,
identify potential sources of contamination, and determine how susceptible the
water supply is to pollution. Utilities and citizens can then use the
information to create protection programs.
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