|
10/26/2023
WT Staff
Drinking Water Facility Profile: City of Clayton, Savannah River Watershed
Surface Water Purchased from Clayton-Rabun County Sewer and Water
SDWA Status: No violations
Owner: Local government, established Mar 12, 1980
Population: 7225 residential customers served through 3633 service connections
Location: Clayton, GA
County: Rabun
Permit: GA2410000
Current Notices: Boil Water Advisory
BWA - 9/8/23 - Clayton - Boil water advisory for Dry Pond Road and Leaning Chimney Drive area due to a water main break. The advisory is also in place for Beck Funeral Home and Life Point Medical, LLC due to the same reason.
Water Source - surface water purchased from Clayton-Rabun County Sewer and Water, Blacks Creek
2022 Annual Water Quality Report - no violations
Contact: City of Clayton - 706-782-4512
Last inspection: July 17, 2020 Sanitary Survey complete - State
No recommendations made or deficiencies noted
The following information gathered from federal EPA pertains to the quarter ending Mar 31, 2022 (data last refreshed on EPA database July 18, 2023)
Non-compliant inspections
(of the previous 12 quarters)
|
with Significant Violations
(of the previous 12 quarters)
|
Informal
Enforcement Actions
(last 5 yrs)
|
Formal
Enforcement Actions
(last 5 years)
|
0 out of 12
|
0 out of 12
|
0
|
0
|
No violations
Drinking water information provided on this site is aggregated from the federal EPA database, state resources and local government sources where available.
EPA publishes violation and enforcement data quarterly, based on the inspection reports of the previous quarter. Water systems, states and EPA take up to three months to verify this data is accurate and complete.
Specific questions about your local water supply should be directed to the facility.
The EPA safe drinking water facilities data available to the public presents what is known to the government based upon the most recently available information for more than one million regulated facilities. EPA and states inspect a percentage of facilities each year, but many facilities, particularly smaller ones, may not have received a recent inspection. It is possible that facilities do have violations that have not yet been discovered, thus are shown as compliant in the system.
EPA cannot positively state that facilities without violations shown in ECHO are necessarily fully compliant with environmental laws. Additionally, some violations at smaller facilities do not need to be reported from the states to EPA. If ECHO shows a recent inspection and the facility is shown with no violations identified, users of the ECHO site can be more confident that the facility is in compliance with federal programs.
The compliance status of smaller facilities that have not had recent inspections or review by EPA or the states may be unknown or only available via state data systems.
|
|
|
All rights reserved 2024 - WTNY - This material may not be reproduced in whole or in part and may not be distributed, publicly performed, proxy cached or otherwise used, except with express permission.
|
|