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Home » From Toilet To Tap! California Approves Rules That Turn Sewage Into Drinking Water

From Toilet To Tap! California Approves Rules That Turn Sewage Into Drinking Water

by CLAYCORD.com
28 comments

Would You Drink It?

By Rachel Becker – CalMatters

In a milestone for creating a major new source of drinking water, California has approved its first standards for turning sewage into potable water supplies delivered to homes and businesses.

The State Water Resources Control Board, in a unanimous vote Tuesday, outlined for the first time how water suppliers can treat recycled water and send it directly to taps. Currently, recycled water is mixed into aquifers or used for irrigation and other non-drinking purposes.

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The new rules — which have been more than a decade in the making and were mandated by a state law — outline a slew of requirements aimed at ensuring that germs and chemicals are scrubbed from treated sewage.

Often dubbed “toilet-to-tap,” the process is actually much more extensive and complex, requiring multiple treatment steps overseen by 63 pages of detailed rules. The new rules also call for extensive monitoring to ensure the treatment is working.

The sewage will be bubbled with ozone, chewed by bacteria, filtered through activated carbon, pushed at high pressures through reverse osmosis membranes multiple times, cleansed with an oxidizer like hydrogen peroxide and beamed with high-intensity UV light. Valuable minerals, such as calcium, that were filtered out will be restored. And then, finally, the wastewater will be subjected to the regular treatment that all drinking water currently undergoes.

California will be following Colorado, which already has regulations, and Texas, where the nation’s first direct potable reuse plant was built a decade ago. Rules are in development in Florida and Arizona, as well.

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Nothing will go into effect immediately; the regulations must undergo a final review by the Office of Administrative Law before being implemented, likely next summer or fall. The first facilities are several years away.

“A city produces wastewater during a drought, and having that source available to augment other (drinking water) supplies can be critical,” said Darrin Polhemus, deputy director of the state water board’s Division of Drinking Water.

The water is expected to be more expensive than imported water, but also provide a more renewable and reliable supply for California as climate change continues.

The expense of the treatment and monitoring means that it will likely be limited to large urban water providers, Polhemus said.

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“It will offer a resilient source in drought times for large water systems to be part of their portfolio. It’s not going to be a singular water source for some small community on the coast — that’s just not going to work out well the way these regs are written,” Polhemus said.

Fewer than a dozen people commented about the regulations at Tuesday’s meeting, all in support.

These regulations “really herald a new era for water reuse in California,” said Jennifer West, managing director of the trade association WateReuse California. “Communities across California will be able to benefit from this new, safe, resilient supply.”

Some environmental groups urged the board to adopt deadlines for more aggressive monitoring to reassure consumers about safety and ensure no outbreaks or other health scares derail the projects.

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Board Chair E. Joaquin Esquivel directed the staff to report back within the next year to update the board on monitoring, contaminants and other issues.

A panel of independent experts determined that the regulations “adequately protect public health,” but reported that some requirements, such as for removing disease-causing germs, might be on the more conservative side, driving up costs.

This could “push utilities toward less environmentally desirable alternatives, such as extracting groundwater without replenishing it,” the panel said in a memo to the state board in September. It could also “limit the ability of smaller communities to use” the recycled water as drinking water.

“I don’t think anyone should be surprised that a water board regulator would choose to err on the side of public health,” said Kevin Hardy, executive director of the National Water Research Institute, a non-profit that coordinated the expert panel.

The Metropolitan Water District, the giant agency that imports water to Southern California, is already on its way to being among the first to directly use recycled water for drinking supplies with Pure Water Southern California, a multi-billion dollar project with the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts.

By 2032, the plant is expected to produce about 115 million gallons of recycled water a day, enough for 385,000 Southern California households. Most will replenish groundwater, but some is expected to be added to drinking supplies upstream of Metropolitan’s treatment plant for imported water.

Mickey Chaudhuri, interim chief of operations at Metropolitan, applauded what he called a historic milestone.

“This marks a pivotal moment in California’s water management history,” he said at the public hearing Tuesday.

Last year, Gov. Gavin Newsom called for increasing recycled water use in California roughly 9% by 2030 and more than doubling it by 2040.

Most treated sewage — about 400 million gallons a day in Los Angeles County alone — is released into rivers, streams and the deep ocean.

28 comments


Reasonable December 22, 2023 - 5:43 PM - 5:43 PM

Oh what could possibly ever go wrong? Just think about all the stuff people flush down the toilet. Drugs, engine oil, caustic chemicals, puke, blood, etc.

29
Badge1104 December 22, 2023 - 5:54 PM - 5:54 PM

Let’s please start this program out in cities like San Francisco Berkeley and Oakland. They tolerate sewage on their streets so it should be an easy transition for them. Another stupid Gavin Newsome / California idea.

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Original G December 22, 2023 - 5:56 PM - 5:56 PM

Stock price of companies selling bottled water should go up.

27
domo December 22, 2023 - 6:29 PM - 6:29 PM

Buy stock in bottled water companies…. it could be safe – but if Newsom even touched the bill – I don’t trust it

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BadgerMe December 22, 2023 - 6:42 PM - 6:42 PM

Sounds good! Let’s put it in the California Aqueduct.

11
Exit 12A December 22, 2023 - 7:09 PM - 7:09 PM

No doubt the purchase and consumption of bottled water will increase and, in turn, the use of plastic bottles.
.
The State legislature will anticipate that in the recyclable waste stream, right?
.
Riiiiight.
.
Rule-making in CA tends to be myopic instead of wholistic. There exists great ideas but the forward thinking and consequential analysis is always severely lacking.

21
Martinez Guy December 22, 2023 - 8:13 PM - 8:13 PM

We should send a direct tap into the state capital. Drink up, “Lawmakers”!!

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Whoe Jim December 22, 2023 - 8:43 PM - 8:43 PM

How ironic, Newsom prefers poo on the sidewalks so it figures he wants poo in our drinking water. It still amazes me anyone would vote for that idiot. Hope his voters enjoy his new flavored water…

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Aunt Barbara December 22, 2023 - 9:14 PM - 9:14 PM

we WILL all be sick with ecoli poisoning and be put on lockdown til out death.
That water wiill never touch Gavin”s lips or that of his exceptional spoiled brats.

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CJRN December 22, 2023 - 9:31 PM - 9:31 PM

And you can send that delicious sewer water to the governor‘s mansion in Sacramento!

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MAGA SAM December 23, 2023 - 4:13 AM - 4:13 AM

Now put a diversity hire in at the top to run it all and nobody will be responsible when whole cities get wiped out.

15
The Fearless Spectator December 23, 2023 - 7:09 AM - 7:09 AM

It really does make sense, as they’ve been feeding us s*** for years. May as well put it in liquid form.
Naturally they’ll be a s*** tax.

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Old Mr. Rodgers December 23, 2023 - 7:48 AM - 7:48 AM

How much poo water do we already drink? Think of all the treated sewer water being dumped into the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers before processed into drinking water down stream.

Old-school guy December 23, 2023 - 9:22 AM - 9:22 AM

Can’t even dignify this story with a comment.

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Captain Bebops December 23, 2023 - 9:36 AM - 9:36 AM

Just more proof the inmates have taken over the asylum!

Steven Powers December 23, 2023 - 9:39 AM - 9:39 AM

When was the last time the state built a reservoir or what storage facility

Old Timer December 23, 2023 - 9:51 AM - 9:51 AM

What in the hell is wrong with the people running this state?Do you think they are going to drink s__t.No it’s aimed at lower class they can’t afford bottled water.When are you going to vote them out?

WC December 23, 2023 - 10:23 AM - 10:23 AM

They should label it with the sewage treatment plant it came from and bottle it. Let’s see. What pairs better with filet mignon? Antioch or Sacramento poopoo water?

David December 23, 2023 - 10:31 AM - 10:31 AM

You vill drink zee pizvater und like it!

Dr. Jellyfinger December 23, 2023 - 10:39 AM - 10:39 AM

Well…. it should be good enough for LA, they’re the ones who need so much water & now they can quit increasing the amount they steal from us.

Dr. Jellyfinger December 23, 2023 - 4:13 PM - 4:13 PM

First time my faucet gets clogged with a used rubber I’m going to start bathing in the rain barrel.

Fed Up December 23, 2023 - 10:52 AM - 10:52 AM

Gavin Says:
“LET THEM EAT CAKE” OR MAYBE “LET THEM DRINK P*SS”

Ignatz December 23, 2023 - 5:20 PM - 5:20 PM

Garbage in, Garbage out…

You can’t make Ice Cream out of Dog Crap, but Clownafornia can do it with water.

Yeah, right…. Pass.

Dr. Jellyfinger December 25, 2023 - 9:38 AM - 9:38 AM

Actually Perrier Water Inc. developed a side product called Terrier… “Sparkling goodness from the center of a dog”

SET December 23, 2023 - 7:18 PM - 7:18 PM

This is already being done in Texas. They have been doing this since 2014.

TN guy December 24, 2023 - 5:32 AM - 5:32 AM

Im in this industry actually —-we like to call it Ass To Glass

American Citizen December 24, 2023 - 7:14 PM - 7:14 PM

Buy Evian and Crystal Geyser stock NOW!!!!

Original G December 24, 2023 - 8:10 PM - 8:10 PM

After the tunnel drains the Delta . . . . .
.
Be able to catch ocean species in antioch, that is if you don’t get mugged.


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