Water wells still undergoing tests
- Share via
Torus Tammer
The Orange County Water District is still conducting tests on two wells
it closed down last week after it found higher than expected levels of a
chemical called N-nitrosodimethylamine, commonly known as NDMA.
The district closed Well No. 98 in Huntington Beach and a well in Costa
Mesa after testing revealed the water had levels of of the chemical that
exceeded the legal limits. The chemical is a regulated carcinogen found
naturally in beverages such beer and milk and food such as processed
meats, as well as in the air and soil, said Rufus Howell, assistant chief
of the division of drinking water and environmental management for the
state Department of Health Services.
“NDMA is a relatively new contaminant that we’ve been aware of for two
years,” Howell said.
The chemical is produced as a byproduct of chlorine used as a
disinfectant in wells, water district officials said. The district uses
chlorine to purify waste water to use as a barrier between seawater and
freshwater.
According to the water district, the risk from the chemical is minute --
one part per trillion of the chemical is comparable to one second of
32,000 years.
Concern was raised when a water analysis of the two wells revealed levels
of the chemical that exceeded legal standards set by the state’s health
department, which is 20 parts per trillion. The Huntington Beach well had
a level of 32 parts per trillion, Howell said.
“To their credit, the Orange County Water District did the right thing in
this situation by notifying the city of Huntington Beach, as well as the
Department of Health Services, about the excessive levels discovered,”
Howell said.
The district will keep the two wells shut down until a solution can be
found to control the situation, officials said. Works is underway to
control or eliminate the high chemical levels by treating the water with
ultraviolet light, which may destroy the compounds that produce the
chemical.
Michael Wehner, associate general manager for water science and
technology at the water district, said he is pleased with the way the
district has handled the issue and said he believes there is nothing to
worry about.
The district “is a leader in the California water industry and the
pursuit to lower existing levels of NDMA,” Wehner said. “Our agency has
been very progressive in developing new procedures and are one of the
first cities to even monitor the NDMA levels of our wells.”
Howell said the chemical was first detected in 1998 at a Northern
California aerospace facility. It prompted investigations of chemicals in
nearby sources of drinking water. After discoveries of higher than
expected levels of the chemical in drinking wells in the San Gabriel
Basin, the state health department acknowledged that very low levels of
the chemical may have been present in treated drinking water. Technology
allowed the department to start regulating the chemical at the parts per
trillion level in March.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.