.^DST*%

M?) STORIES OF PROGRESS IN ACHIEVING HEALTHY WATERS

^PROltc/ EPA Region 3 Water Protection Division

ATA GLANCE

•	Above: Counties impacted by the Elk
River spill.

•	Safe Water for WV project engaged
citizens across the state after the spill.

Protecting Source Water in West Virginia

Charleston, West Virginia • January 19, 2017

EPA funds helped West Virginia residents and utilities engage in
source water protection efforts in the wake of the Elk River
chemical spill of 2014. The spill contaminated the water supply
of nearly 300,000 people in the capitol city Charleston as well as
multiple surrounding counties.

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection
(WVDEP) used $15,000 from its EPA Section 319 grant to
support a community education and engagement project to
actively involve citizens in plans to protect their drinking water
sources. The $15,000 was the largest contribution to the
$50,000 project.

The "Safe Water for WV" project led by the West Virginia Rivers
Coalition (WVRC) included a series of public forums, social
media, educational tools, local partner network building and
technical assistance to provide citizens with information on source
water planning and their role in the process. A key activity was
the development of a "Citizen's Guide to Drinking Water
Protection."

The overall goal of the project was to help protect drinking water
supplies throughout the state by ensuring that watershed groups
and other community stakeholders assumed a constructive role in
the source water planning process.

A law passed by the state after the spill (SB 373) required public water systems across the state to draft
or update source water protection plans with the public's involvement. The plans are designed to help
manage pollution from general sources that could endanger drinking water supplies.

Per WVRC, the Elk River chemical leak and ensuing water crisis was an awakening for many to the
sources and vulnerability of their water supplies. It was the first time many people thought about where
their drinking water comes from and the connection between watershed protection, public health and
economic security.

Among the results of the Safe Water for WV project were five public forums attended by at least 345
community members, 72 local partners and 10 public water utilities. The Citizen's Guide was
distributed at the forum and was discussed in a statewide webinar.

WVDEP will use funds from its 2017 Section 319 grant award for a pilot project, which integrates
Source Water Protection Plans and Watershed Based Plans in two watersheds.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
EPA Region 3 Water Protection Division
Philadelphia, PA

For additional information contact:

Fred Suffian, suffian.fred@epa.gov
EPA WPD Office of State and Watershed Partnerships
Timothy Craddock, Timothy.D.Craddock@wv.gov
West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection


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