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Public Water System

POMERENE DWID

PWSID AZ0402012 · Arizona · 1,030 people served

F
Failing

POMERENE DWID is an EPA-regulated public water system in Arizona (PWSID AZ0402012). It serves an estimated 1,030 residents — a rural community of customers — across 1 community across 1 ZIP code.

Over the past five years, POMERENE DWID has recorded 15 EPA health-based violations. The grade of F summarizes this compliance pattern. Specific contaminants, dates, and rule citations are listed in the violation history below.

Service Area

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Centered on the averaged ZIP-code centroid of 1 ZIP served.

Population

1,030

Cities

1

ZIPs

1

Violations

15

EPA Health-Based Violations

Health-based Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) violations on file for POMERENE DWID over the past five years of EPA SDWIS reporting.

Fluoridechemical

EPA Code 1025 · Maximum Contaminant Level Exceedance

5

violations

EPA Limit

4.0 mg/L

Last Reading

4.1 MG/L

First Reported

Sep 2025

Most Recent

Oct 2025

What this violation means

Fluoride at the optimal level (~0.7 mg/L) reduces tooth decay, which is why most US utilities add it. The MCL of 4.0 mg/L exists to protect against skeletal fluorosis from naturally high-fluoride groundwater, while the EPA's secondary standard of 2.0 mg/L addresses dental fluorosis in children.

Recommended precautions

  • Reverse osmosis removes fluoride; standard carbon filters do NOT.
  • If your child uses fluoride toothpaste and drinks fluoridated water, supervise brushing to limit ingestion.
  • Bone meal supplements often contain fluoride and should be used cautiously.
Arsenicchemical

EPA Code 1005 · Maximum Contaminant Level Exceedance

2

violations

EPA Limit

0.01 mg/L

Last Reading

.011 MG/L

First Reported

Apr 2025

Most Recent

Apr 2025

What this violation means

Arsenic is a known human carcinogen that occurs naturally in groundwater across many parts of the United States, especially the Southwest and parts of New England. Long-term exposure even at low levels has been linked to bladder, lung, and skin cancer, as well as cardiovascular disease and developmental effects in children.

Recommended precautions

  • Reverse osmosis filtration removes arsenic effectively.
  • Distillation also removes arsenic — point-of-use distillers work for drinking and cooking water.
  • Boiling does NOT remove arsenic. It actually concentrates it as water evaporates.
  • If your well water has arsenic, test annually and treat at the point of entry.
Leadchemical

EPA Code 5200 · Treatment Technique Violation

4

violations

EPA Limit

0.015 mg/L

Last Reading

First Reported

Oct 2024

Most Recent

Oct 2024

What this violation means

Lead is a potent neurotoxin with no safe exposure level. In drinking water it primarily enters via corroded lead service lines, lead-soldered copper pipes, and brass fixtures. Children under 6 and pregnant women face the highest risk because lead disrupts developing nervous and skeletal systems.

Recommended precautions

  • Run cold tap water 30–120 seconds before drinking or cooking, especially after the tap has been unused for hours.
  • Never cook with hot tap water — heat increases lead leaching from pipes.
  • Use an NSF/ANSI 53 certified filter for lead removal (carbon block or reverse osmosis).
  • If you have children, get blood lead levels tested by your pediatrician.

EPA Code 8000 · Treatment Technique Violation

4

violations

EPA Limit

0 per 100 mL presence/absence

Last Reading

First Reported

Nov 2021

Most Recent

Nov 2021

What this violation means

Total coliform bacteria are themselves usually harmless, but their presence signals that the water distribution system has a vulnerability — typically a cracked pipe, loss of pressure, or back-siphonage — that could allow disease-causing pathogens to enter. Repeated coliform-positive samples trigger mandatory utility investigation.

Recommended precautions

  • If your utility issues a boil-water advisory, boil all drinking and cooking water for at least one minute.
  • Use bottled water until the advisory is lifted.
  • Ice from icemakers and beverages made before the advisory should be discarded.
  • UV light and chlorination both kill coliform bacteria — most home filters do not.

Source: EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS). Health-based violations only. Older violations may have been resolved; check your utility's most recent Consumer Confidence Report for current status.

Cities Served by POMERENE DWID

ZIP Codes Served

About this system

EPA records this system as PWSID AZ0402012. Data reflects the most recent EPA SDWIS publication as of 2026-05-18. Public Water System Identifiers (PWSIDs) are assigned by the EPA's Safe Drinking Water Act program to track every regulated water utility in the United States. The first two letters typically indicate the state primacy agency. For real-time water quality information, contact POMERENE DWID directly or review their annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR).

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