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SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY

PWS ID: PA7381056 · GRANTVILLE, Pennsylvania 17028

SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY serves 130 people in GRANTVILLE, Pennsylvania using Groundwater water sources. It has 11 recorded EPA violations, including 0 health-based violations. No PFAS contamination was detected in UCMR5 testing.

Water Quality Snapshot: SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY

SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY is a public/private-owned non-transient non-community water system that delivers drinking water to 130 residents in GRANTVILLE, Pennsylvania (Lebanon County) through 32 service connections. Its water is drawn from groundwater sources. EPA's Safe Drinking Water Information System records 11 total violations for this system , of which 0 (0%) are health-based — meaning a contaminant exceeded an EPA Maximum Contaminant Level or a required treatment technique failed. A further 4 monitoring and reporting violations are on file. The most recent violation on record dates to 2020.

The most frequently cited contaminant at this system is Revised Total Coliform Rule, recorded in 3 violations (Other). This system has not yet been sampled under EPA's UCMR5 PFAS monitoring program, so no PFAS detection data is available here.

Across Pennsylvania, EPA tracks 7,701 public water systems serving 12,630,061 people, with 1,159,868 cumulative violations and 68,517 health-based violations on record. About 97% of systems in the state carry at least one violation, and state-wide the average per system is 150.6 violations. SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY's 11 violations sit below the Pennsylvania average. Statewide, 224 of 389 UCMR5-tested systems have reported PFAS detections (57.6%). All figures above are sourced directly from EPA SDWIS and UCMR5 public data releases and are updated as EPA publishes new reporting cycles.

Population Served
130
Total Violations
11
Health-Based Violations
0
Water Source
Groundwater

System Details

System Type
Non-Transient Non-Community
Owner Type
Public/Private
Connections
32
County
Lebanon
School/Daycare
No
MCL Violations
0
Monitoring Violations
4
Treatment Tech Violations
0

Violation History

Contaminant violations recorded by EPA.

Contaminant Category Count Latest
Revised Total Coliform Rule Other 3 2016
Coliform (TCR) MR 1 2016
Revised Total Coliform Rule MON 1 2020
Chlorine MR 1 2016
Nitrate MR 1 1983

Verify This Water System

The figures above are aggregated from EPA's public databases. To verify the underlying records — or to file a complaint, request a Consumer Confidence Report, or check current monitoring status — go directly to the federal and state regulators that enforce the Safe Drinking Water Act for SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY.

Federal Source of Truth

EPA SDWIS — Federal Reports

EPA's Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS) holds the federal compliance record for every regulated public water system. Open the system-level report by PWS ID:

View PWS ID PA7381056 on SDWIS

Source: EPA SDWIS Federal Reports Search

State Regulator

Pennsylvania Drinking Water Authority

Pennsylvania DEP — Bureau of Safe Drinking Water is the primacy agency that licenses and inspects SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY under EPA-delegated authority.

Open PA regulator portal

Source: Pennsylvania DEP — Bureau of Safe Drinking Water

Violation Timeline

Each row links to the EPA SDWIS public record for verification. Cross-reference the contaminant code on EPA's federal report to see violation dates, return-to-compliance status, and enforcement actions.

Year (latest) Contaminant Category Count EPA Record
2020 Revised Total Coliform Rule MON 1 SDWIS / PA7381056 / 8000
2016 Revised Total Coliform Rule Other 3 SDWIS / PA7381056 / 8000
2016 Coliform (TCR) MR 1 SDWIS / PA7381056 / 3100
2016 Chlorine MR 1 SDWIS / PA7381056 / 0999
1983 Nitrate MR 1 SDWIS / PA7381056 / 1040

How SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY Compares

Cross-reference this system's record against state averages and the federal MCL framework for context.

Metric SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY Pennsylvania avg Federal benchmark
Total violations 11 150.6 SDWA compliance — any non-zero count is a recorded breach
Health-based violations 0 8.9 Indicates a contaminant exceeded a federal MCL
PFAS detection None 57.6% EPA final rule (2024): PFOA/PFOS MCL = 4.0 ppt
Population served 130 1,640 Sizing context for compliance burden

Sources: EPA SDWIS and EPA National Primary Drinking Water Regulations (40 CFR Part 141). State averages computed across 7,701 regulated public water systems in Pennsylvania.

Federal MCL reference — Safe Drinking Water Act thresholds
Contaminant Federal MCL / Action Level Note
Lead 0 mg/L (Action Level: 0.015 mg/L) Lead and Copper Rule treatment technique
Arsenic 0.010 mg/L (10 ppb) Health-based MCL since 2006
Total Coliform Treatment technique (RTCR) Indicator organism, monitoring trigger
PFOA / PFOS (PFAS) 4.0 ppt each (final 2024 rule) Compliance deadline 2029
Nitrate (as N) 10 mg/L Acute health risk for infants

Frequently Asked Questions

Is SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY water safe to drink?
SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY (PWS ID: PA7381056) has 11 recorded violations in the EPA SDWIS database. No PFAS contamination was detected in UCMR5 testing. This system serves 130 people using Groundwater sources.
How many people does SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY serve?
SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY serves 130 people in GRANTVILLE, Pennsylvania. It is a Public/Private-owned system using Groundwater water sources with 32 service connections.
What type of violations does SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY have?
SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY has 11 total violations: 0 health-based violations (MCL exceedances or treatment failures), 4 monitoring/reporting violations, and 0 treatment technique violations. Health-based violations indicate contaminant levels exceeded EPA safe limits.
Has PFAS been detected in SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY water?
No PFAS testing data is available for SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY under the EPA's UCMR5 monitoring program.
What water source does SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY use?
SUMMIT INT SCHOOL OF MINISTRY uses Groundwater as its primary water source. It is classified as a Non-Transient Non-Community Water System, serving the same people for at least 6 months per year.
Where does this data come from?
All data comes from the EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS) and the UCMR5 PFAS monitoring program. SDWIS tracks compliance for all public water systems regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act.

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Data Sources: EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS), Q4 2025. This data is provided for informational purposes only.

Related

Data sourced from $official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainWater Editorial