Keep Your Home Water Supply Safe

Easy Ways to Avoid Water Contamination From Cross-Connections

By Laura Ashcroft, published Mar 05, 2008
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What are the odds your home water supply could be contaminated by accidental cross-connections? About 96 percent, according to joint university-government research results.

But you can easily protect your home water supply, and you don't have to be a plumber for the following quick fixits!

Municipal water is piped into your home under pressure. If the pressure drops, under certain conditions, the flow of water can reverse and travel back into the water lines. These backflow events can create serious health hazards, as documented by case studies.

Let's say you're washing the car and you toss the end of the hose into a bucket of soapy water. Or you've hooked up a fertilizer dispenser to your hose to feed the lawn.

All is well, until the pressure of the water entering your home falls. Perhaps there's a break in a main water line, or the hydrants in your area are being opened for testing or to fight a fire. Or maybe your better half has turned off the water supply while making repairs and isn't aware there's a chemical sprayer still attached to the hose.

A study by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the University of Southern California (USC) Foundation for Cross-Connection Control found that 95.7 percent of the households surveyed had direct or indirect cross-connections to a health hazard, starting with:

Hose Bibs
For 91 percent of the homes, potential cross-connections were found at exterior spigots. The good news is that backflow preventers (anti-siphon valves) are cheap, available at hardware stores, and take about 30 seconds to install.

A backflow preventer provides a physical barrier which stops water and bacteria from flowing back into the plumbing lines.

It's also wise to maintain a 2-inch air space between the end of the hose and the container being filled. There's a cute comic book for your kids that explains air gaps and cross-connections with the help of "Buster Backflow."

Toilets
The EPA-USC team noted other possible cross-connections in toilets for 61 percent of the homes evaluated.

Keep Your Home Water Supply Safe
Keep Your Home Water Supply Safe

A backflow preventer on every hose bib is cheap insurance to protect your home water supply.

Credit: L. Ashcroft

Copyright: L. Ashcroft

Takeaways
  • Make sure appliances have required air gaps
  • Install backflow preventers on hose bibs
  • Never let a hose sit in dirty water
Did You Know?
Plumbing cross connections + reduced water pressure = contaminated water supply
Comments
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Very interesting article. I plan to share it with my hubby.

Posted on 03/05/2008 at 9:03:42 AM

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