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Item No. 1.
MEETING DATE: 09/19/2022
 
TO: HONORABLE MAYOR/CHAIR  AND COUNCILMEMBERS/DIRECTORS
 
FROM: JIM SADRO, CITY MANAGER/EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
By:  Elias Saykali, Public Works Director

 
SUBJECT:
PUBLIC HEALTH GOALS REPORT - CALENDAR YEAR 2022

RECOMMENDATION:


That the City Council/Agency Directors:
A.  Conduct a duly noticed public hearing for the purpose of receiving public comment on the City's 2022 Public Health Goals Report; and,

B.  Receive and file the City's 2022 Public Health Goals Report in accordance with provisions of the California Health and Safety Code.

DISCUSSION:

State law requires the California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) to develop Public Health Goals (PHGs) for the regulation of drinking water contaminants. A PHG is the level of a given contaminant in drinking water that is deemed not to pose a significant health risk if consumed over the course of a lifetime. PHGs are recommended targets, and are not required to be met by any water system. 

The Calderon-Sher Safe Drinking Water Act of 1996 (Senate Bill 1307) requires public water systems serving more than 10,000 service connections, such as the La Habra Utility Authority, to prepare a report that provides information on the detection of any contaminants in the water supply above the PHGs published by OEHHA, along with cost estimates associated with the removal of any detected contaminants, and identifies the health risks for each contaminant which exceeds a PHG. The PHG report must be prepared and made available to the public every three years.

After PHGs are developed by the OEHHA, they are forwarded to the State Water Resources Control Board, Division of Drinking Water (DDW) for use in revising or developing a Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) in drinking water. The MCL is the highest level of a contaminant that is allowed in drinking water. California MCLs cannot be less stringent than federal MCLs, and must be as close as is technically and economically feasible to the PHGs.  DDW is required to take treatment technologies and cost of compliance into account when setting an MCL. Each MCL is reviewed at least once every five years.

Based on these standards, the City's water system complies with all health-based drinking water standards and MCLs as required by the DDW and the United States Environmental Protection Agency.

FISCAL IMPACT/SOURCE OF FUNDING:

There is no fiscal impact.

GENERAL PLAN RELEVANCE/CITY COUNCIL GOALS & OBJECTIVES:

WS 1.5 Drinking Water Standards
 
 

Goal 6 Community Outreach and Civic Engagement, Objective D

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