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Public Water System

RICHFIELD SPRINGS VILLAGE

PWSID NY3800156 · New York · 1,200 people served

D
Poor

RICHFIELD SPRINGS VILLAGE is an EPA-regulated public water system in New York (PWSID NY3800156). It serves an estimated 1,200 residents — a rural community of customers — across 1 community across 1 ZIP code.

Over the past five years, RICHFIELD SPRINGS VILLAGE has recorded 6 EPA health-based violations. The grade of D 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

1,200

Cities

1

ZIPs

1

Violations

6

EPA Health-Based Violations

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

EPA Code 0400 · Treatment Technique Violation

2

violations

EPA Limit

0 per 100 mL presence/absence

Last Reading

First Reported

Nov 2023

Most Recent

Nov 2023

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.

EPA Code 2950 · Maximum Contaminant Level Exceedance

2

violations

EPA Limit

0.08 mg/L

Last Reading

83.7 UG/L

First Reported

Jan 2022

Most Recent

Jan 2022

What this violation means

Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs) form when chlorine reacts with naturally occurring organic matter — leaves, soil, algae — in source water. They are among the most commonly reported violations because utilities pulling from surface water (rivers, lakes, reservoirs) struggle to balance disinfection with byproduct formation. Long-term exposure has been linked to bladder cancer and adverse pregnancy outcomes.

Recommended precautions

  • Activated carbon filters (pitcher, faucet, or under-sink) effectively reduce TTHMs.
  • Letting water sit uncovered allows TTHMs to off-gas — leave a pitcher in the fridge for several hours.
  • Shower with the bathroom fan on; TTHMs can volatilize into the air during hot showers.
  • Boiling reduces TTHMs through volatilization, but only after extended boiling.

EPA Code 2456 · Maximum Contaminant Level Exceedance

2

violations

EPA Limit

0.06 mg/L

Last Reading

60.5 UG/L

First Reported

Jan 2022

Most Recent

Jan 2022

What this violation means

Haloacetic Acids (HAA5) are the second major group of disinfection byproducts after TTHMs. They form by the same mechanism — chlorine reacting with organic matter — and pose similar long-term cancer risks. Utilities are required to test quarterly at distribution-system locations to track HAA5 levels.

Recommended precautions

  • Activated carbon filtration removes most HAA5.
  • Reverse osmosis is highly effective.
  • Unlike TTHMs, HAA5 do not significantly off-gas. Use treatment rather than aeration.
  • Long-term ingestion is the primary concern, not short-term skin contact.

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 RICHFIELD SPRINGS VILLAGE

ZIP Codes Served

About this system

EPA records this system as PWSID NY3800156. 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 RICHFIELD SPRINGS VILLAGE directly or review their annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR).

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