Strontium is on the list and I question why. USGS has thousands of analysis along with probably all 50,000 public water utilties. Sr is easily measured even at ultra low concentrations, there is a wealth of data as it is listed on all the consumer confidence reports I have seen (typically included in major ion analysis by ICP-OES or ICP-MS. The extra couple thousand analysis by inclusion of Sr in UCMR-3 is essentially a waste of taxpayer money. Include some of the pesticides (none listed for UCMR-3) or needed data on other disinfection by-products. EPA currently only requires testing for 2 DBP's (trichlormethane and halgenated acetic acids). There are literally hundreeds of DBP's.
Glad to see EPA is finally including viruses-about time. With all the hoopla about hexavalent chromium, wouldn't it be a good idea to utilze UCMR-3 to find the actual occurance rather than rely on EWG's results. Come on EPA-be more pro-active and avoid the embarressment EWG and other groups are causing you.
Anonymous public comment
This is comment on Proposed Rule
Revisions to the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Regulation (UCMR 3) for Public Water Systems
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