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Contact Water Quality

Inquiries and complaints should be directed to the Water Quality Information Line at 857-8260 or waterquality@abcwua.org.

Mailing Address:
Water Quality
Water Compliance Division
Albuquerque Bernalillo County
Water Utility Authority
P.O. Box 568
Albuquerque, NM 87103-0568

Phone:
(505) 857-8260

TTY:
(505) 857-8206

 

Drought Strategy

Drought Management Strategy
Drought Management Strategy

An updated strategy was approved by the Water Authority Board at its April 18 meeting.
Click here to learn more.

2012 Water Quality Report

water quality report

Water Quality Report

We want our customers to have accurate information about the quality of their drinking water. Read our Water Quality Report 2012 for more information.

Home arrow Water Quality by Distribution Zone
Water Quality by Distribution Zone PDF Print E-mail

Click to Find Your Zone

What is an EPTDS?

Ground water is moved from the wells to storage tanks in large diameter pipelines. The water is treated along the way. Treatment includes:

  • Disinfection with sodium hypochlorite. Generated on-site from table salt and water, the product is like weak household bleach.
  • Addition of a phosphate-based corrosion inhibitor to most well water supplies produced on the east side of the Rio Grande. No corrosion-inhibitor is added to well water supplies on the west side of the river.

Purified surface water is pumped to certain storage tanks and blended with treated ground water. At the Entry Point to the Distribution System or the EPTDS, water from a storage tank enters the distribution system to deliver water to individual neighborhoods and customer taps by gravity flow. Specific EPTDS(s) provide water to each distribution zone. In some cases, treated water from an individual well enters the distribution system through a separate EPTDS. Water distributed within each distribution zone is of the same quality.

How Trunk Lines Work

From the valley to the heights, storage tanks are organized in trunks. Water moves in trunk lines that run from low to high ground, and down major streets. Pump stations move treated water from one storage tank to another.

How Trunk Lines Work Schematic

Now, because of the San Juan-Chama Drinking Water Project, we have a system of north/south pipelines that connect all the trunk lines. They help distribute the purified surface water and water from low arsenic wells throughout the system, on both sides of the river. The result is a mix of treated waters from many wells and purified surface water in each storage tank.

Results of Water Quality Testing

The interactive map below is linked to tables that show the results of water quality testing. The Water Authority service area is outlined on the map. The blue lines on the map show the 20 distribution zones in the service area (including the zone for the North West Service Area (the former New Mexico Utilities, Inc)). Use the map to identify your distribution zone.

Water Sample Test KitThe table for each distribution zone gives a summary of water quality testing results for that zone and the average water quality testing results for the distribution system citywide including the results for the North West Service Area. For each zone, there are two tables.

The first table shows the results of water quality testing to comply with drinking water quality regulations. Only the substances that were detected during  the most recent compliance monitoring at EPTDS that feed a zone are listed in the table. The results for compliance monitoring for microbiological contaminants, disinfection by-products, and disinfectants measured throughout the distribution system are listed here. Substances that were not found in compliance monitoring are listed here.

The results of additional water quality testing for 2011 are summarized in the second table. These additional samples are collected to monitor the distribution system more frequently and for more substances than regulations require. Samples are collected in each distribution zone every three months.

How to Use This Map

  1. Find where you live on the map.
  2. Look for the blue number/name labeling the zone bounded in blue surrounding your house. That is your distribution zone.
  3. Click on your distribution zone number/name for detailed reports on the water quality in your zone.
 

Como usar este mapa:

  1. Localice adonde vive en el mapa.
  2. Busque al número/nombre azul demarcando la zona delineada en azul que rodea su casa. Éste es su zona de distribución.
  3. Clic en su nombre/numero de su zona de distribución para informes detallados de la calidad de agua en su zona. Los datos aparecerán en un ventana de búsqueda aparte.
Zone 3 Zone 8 North West Service Area Zone 3 Zone 1 Zone 19 Zone 19 Zone 18 Zone 17 Zone 16 Zone 10 Zone 13 Zone 12 Zone 14 Zone 1 Zone 9 Zone 11 Zone 15 Zone 6 Zone 8 Zone 2 Zone 5 Zone 7 Zone 4 Zone 3 Select a Distribution Zone
Last Updated ( Monday, 01 April 2013 )
 

Employees | Disclaimer | Contact Us & Feedback
Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority
P.O. Box 568, Albuquerque, NM 87103
Phone: (505) 768-2500 | Fax: (505) 768-2580 | Email: wainfo@abcwua.org

Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Authority