Home/ Directory/ IA/ COGGON WATER DEPARTMENT

Water system · PWSID IA5722053

COGGON WATER DEPARTMENT

100
Excellent
PurityRadar safety score

PWSID

IA5722053

State

Iowa

City

COGGON

Population served

701

Primary source

Groundwater

Score history

No change since tracking began Jun 18, 2026.

Jun 18, 2026 · score 100 Jun 18, 2026 · score 100

2 score updates logged since tracking began Jun 18, 2026. Each future EPA re-score adds a point.

PFAS & contaminant readings

No PFAS detections are on record for this system from EPA’s UCMR5 monitoring (2023–25). Absence of a detection isn’t a guarantee — not every system was sampled, and this dataset doesn’t cover other contaminants.

Violations & enforcement

40

Violations on record

0

Unaddressed

0

Health-based

165

Enforcement actions

From EPA ECHO (SDWIS), most recent enforcement Jun 2025. Official EPA record →

Monitoring · Lead & Copper Rule began Mar 2025 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · Nitrate began Jul 2023 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · Lead & Copper Rule began Jun 2023 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · Nitrate began Jul 2022 Resolved
Monitoring · Lead & Copper Rule began Aug 2018 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · Nitrate began Jul 2017 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · Gross alpha began Apr 2017 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · Uranium began Apr 2017 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · EPA contaminant 2040 began Jul 2013 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · EPA contaminant 2050 began Jul 2013 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · EPA contaminant 2326 began Jul 2013 Resolved
Monitoring & reporting · EPA contaminant 2039 began Jul 2013 Resolved

Recent enforcement actions

  • State action · SIF Jun 2025
  • State action · SIE Apr 2025
  • State action · SFJ Apr 2025
  • State action · SOX Apr 2025
  • State action · SOX Oct 2024
  • State action · SIF Oct 2024
  • State action · SOX Sep 2024
  • State action · SIE Jul 2024

This profile is built from EPA public records for system IA5722053 — SDWIS violations and UCMR5 PFAS sampling. The score is system-level and can’t account for your home’s plumbing (older pipes can add lead at the tap). For health decisions, check your exact address, read the utility’s Consumer Confidence Report, and confirm with your provider.