Pennsylvania DEP Implements Plan to Improve Drinking Water Quality Inspections
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has announced plans to expedite the filling of vacancies and the training of new staff to bolster program resources for the Safe Drinking Water (SDW) program.
“Ensuring that Pennsylvania’s drinking water is clean and safe to drink is one of the most important roles that DEP has,” said Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Patrick McDonnell. “DEP is using the resources we have at hand as well as the agency’s regulatory authority to address the shortfall in inspectors for the Safe Drinking Water program.”
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection has already hired 2 new staff, with 4 additional vacancies currently in the process of being filled. The agency will also open a 30-day comment period on August 26, 2017 to solicit public feedback on a fee package for public water systems that would provide additional resources for the program.
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection proposed the fee package to the Environmental Quality Board in May 2017. Through the fee package, new annual fees would be instituted for all public water systems based on the number of people they serve. In addition, the one-time permit fees for new water systems or modifications to existing systems would also be increased. The proceeds of the fees, once implemented, are expected to be approximately $7.5 million per year, and would go to the Safe Drinking Water Program. This would supplement the $7.7 million from the general fund and $12 million in funds from the EPA.
The comment period will close on September 25, 2017. Comments may be submitted using the agency’s eComment system, accessible at http://www.ahs.dep.pa.gov/eComment. Written comments may also be submitted by email at RegComments@pa.gov or mailed to the Environmental Quality Board, Rachel Carson State Office Building, P.O. Box 8477, Harrisburg, PA 17105-2063. Comments submitted by fax will not be accepted.
Related News
From Archive
- Final Lake Erie sewer tunnel project set to begin after decades-long $3 billion effort
- Oil pipeline struck during fiber optic construction spills into L.A. storm drains
- Fiber drilling strike triggers major sewer failure, lawsuits in Florida
- OSHA cites Alabama builder after fatal trench collapse
- Utility strike at center of Dallas explosion investigation
- Race Communications breaks ground on Bakersfield fiber network
- Final Lake Erie sewer tunnel project set to begin after decades-long $3 billion effort
- Inside Infrastructure: Utility locators warn of systemic failures in damage prevention process
- Senate passes PIPELINE Safety Act aimed at strengthening buried utility protection
- $104 million Lynchburg, Va., tunnel nears breakthrough beneath Blackwater Creek

Comments