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    19-05-16 Bio Report on Water Quality

    COLORADO SPRINGS, UNITED STATES

    05.22.2019

    Courtesy Story

    21st Space Wing

    PETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. - Colorado Springs Utilities supplies drinking water to Peterson Air Force Base. Personnel on base can get the facts about the water they drink from the recently released CSU 2019 Water Quality Report. The report, reporting period Jan. 1 to Dec. 31, 2018, informs the public about the water quality and services CSU delivers to the base every day.

    CSU staff, as well as the 21st Medical Group’s Bioenvironmental Engineering Flight, test the water consumed by the base. Throughout the process of collection, treatment and distribution, certified water treatment plant operators and laboratory staff monitor the water quality for its chemical and biological content. Some of these analyses are required to meet state and federal standards, while others are part of ongoing testing to assure a continual supply of high quality drinking water.

    CSU employees test the water at treatment plants and throughout the CSU water distribution system. Bioenvironmental Engineering tests water at six sampling locations on Peterson AFB per month for microbiological contamination that could occur within the distribution system. The sample sites include the youth activities center, child development centers and aircraft watering points. All microbiological samples collected in 2018 were analyzed by El Paso County Public Health laboratory and reported safe.

    With no major source of water nearby, CSU relies on a raw water collection system that delivers water to Colorado Springs from nearly 200 miles away. The sources that supply these systems originate in wilderness areas near Aspen, Leadville, and Breckenridge. Nearly 75 percent of our water originates from mountain streams. Water from these streams is collected and stored in various reservoirs along the Continental Divide. The collection systems in this area consist of the Homestake, Fryingpan-Arkansas, Twin Lakes, and Blue River systems. The majority of this water is transferred to Colorado Springs through pipelines that help to protect the water from contamination, such as, herbicides, pesticides, heavy metals and other chemicals. Water delivered to Colorado Springs is stored at Rampart Reservoir and at the Catamount reservoirs on Pikes Peak which then supply CSU water treatment plants.

    CSU also uses local surface water sources to supplement the water received from the mountain sources. Sources include water from the north and south slopes of Pikes Peak/Catamount Reservoirs, Crystal Reservoir, and South Slope Reservoirs and tributaries, North and South Cheyenne Creeks, Fountain Creek, Monument Creek/Pikeview Reservoir, Northfield Watershed/Rampart and Northfield Reservoirs, and the Pueblo Reservoir.

    Additionally, CSU purchases treated surface water from the Fountain Valley Authority. FVA receives water from the Fryingpan-Arkansas Project. The Fryingpan-Arkansas Project is a system of pipes and tunnels that collects water in the Hunter-Fryingpan Wilderness Area near Aspen. Waters collected from the system are diverted to the Arkansas River, near Buena Vista, and then flow approximately 150 miles downstream to Pueblo Reservoir. From there, the water travels through a pipeline to a water treatment plant before being delivered to Colorado Springs. The water source may vary during the year and may be a blend of surface water and purchased water.

    To view the CSU water quality report and other related water quality links, visit https://www.csu.org/pages/water-quality-r.aspx. The report is also available at the Public Notices section on the Peterson AFB public website. The report is also provided to all base dormitory residents, child development centers, and the base dental surgeon. Customers without web access can obtain a hard copy of the report at the Bioenvironmental Engineering office located in building 1246.

    For questions concerning water quality issues in the Tierra Vista Community distribution system, please call the TVC Facility Maintenance Department at (719) 597-5950.

    For more information about Peterson Air Force Base water quality, call Mr. Michael Puleo at (719) 556-7721.

    Water quality information courtesy of Colorado Springs Utilities and Bioenvironmental Engineering

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.22.2019
    Date Posted: 05.30.2019 16:35
    Story ID: 323427
    Location: COLORADO SPRINGS, US

    Web Views: 19
    Downloads: 0

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