Oceanside Officials Counter Firm’s Claim City Among Worst Water Quality

The $ 67 million Pure Water Oceanside project will draw water from Oceanside’s San Luis Rey Water Reclamation Facility and purify it according to drinking water standards. Photo via City of Oceanside.

Oceanside city officials on Wednesday labeled their drinking water consistently “high quality, safe and reliable” in hopes of reassuring residents after a lawn care company rated their water on 198 out of 200 cities across the country.

Rosemarie Chora, the city’s water services director, said a March 23 report by LawnStarter was “very successful” when residents raised the alarm on social media.

Austin, Texas-based LawnStarter audits gardeners and pest control companies and connects them online with homeowners in approximately 120 cities across the country, according to its website. It has polluted the city in several ways.

“In each category we disagreed with their results,” said Chora. “We had a good dialogue with them. They actually agreed with what we said about what they had published and they would go back and recalculate. Even on their own criteria, we wouldn’t have ranked this low if their data had been correct. “

LawnStarter cited non-recorded rule violations – but apparently did not consider government data on drinking water quality publicly available. Non-statistical customer satisfaction ratings were highlighted – and the percentage of residents of a city who lack kitchen installations, which has no impact on the quality of drinking water.

The drinking water report was still available on LawnStarter’s blog as of Wednesday, along with similar reports that ranked U.S. cities for hiking, pizza, outdoor employment, and vacation home ownership.

The last time Oceanside’s water system breached state or federal regulations was on October 7, 2013, Chora said. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency cited the system for losing communication with the computer equipment that monitors water quality for about seven hours just after midnight.

During the period, a trained and licensed operator manually monitored the water quality every 15 minutes as needed. There was no change in quality, said Chora.

Oceanside gets about 90% of its water from the San Diego County Water Authority and the remainder from its own Mission Basin Aquifer.

The city said in a statement released Wednesday morning that it treats all of its water in its own facilities using different procedures for each type.

– The City News Service contributed to this article

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