Sistemas de agua de Virginia clasificados por carga de exposición — 2026

Empresas de agua comunitarias de Virginia clasificadas por una puntuación de gravedad de infracciones de 5 años ponderada por población, que combina datos de cumplimiento SDWIS de la EPA con estimaciones poblacionales de los límites del área de servicio del sistema de agua comunitario v3 de la EPA.

25 Sistemas
clasificados
22,183 PWSID
con datos demográficos
2019-23 Versión del
Censo ACS
EPA v3 Límites del área de servicio
de CWS (marzo de 2026)
Cómo leer esta lista Los sistemas se ordenan por carga de exposición: una puntuación ponderada por población que combina cuántas personas atiende un proveedor con la severidad de su historial federal de infracciones de cinco años. Las infracciones a la salud y de técnica de tratamiento suman linealmente; los conteos de monitoreo/reporte contribuyen en escala logarítmica para que los grandes proveedores con muchos puntos de muestreo no dominen solo por acumulación de papeleo. Las infracciones a la salud sin resolver tienen un peso adicional de 20×. Véase la página de metodología para conocer los pesos exactos y la justificación.

These 25 Virginia water utilities have the highest population-weighted violation burden over the past five years. Scoring combines EPA health-based and treatment-technique violations on a linear scale (10× / 6×), adds a log-scaled contribution for monitoring/reporting lapses, and applies a 20× weight for currently-unresolved health violations. The total is multiplied by each system's population served.

RankWater SystemStatePop servedExposure burdenHealth viol. (5yr)T&TMRUnresolved
1 Danville, City of Virginia 34,895 1,047 3 0 0
2 City of Emporia Virginia 5,290 1,008 11 0 1 4
3 Berryville, Town of Virginia 4,145 873 9 0 1 6
4 Wilderness Virginia 3,301 683 8 1 1 6
5 Mountain Lakes Water Company Virginia 4,905 518 4 4 2 2
6 City of Covington Virginia 5,291 293 2 2 44 1
7 Richmond, City of Virginia 210,447 264 0 0 2
8 Wytheville, Town of Virginia 6,320 190 3 0 0
9 Loudoun Water - Central System Virginia 266,524 160 0 0 1
10 City of Norfolk Virginia 201,592 121 0 0 1
11 Strasburg, Town of Virginia 5,789 116 2 0 0
12 City of Charlottesville Virginia 48,058 60 0 0 2
13 City of Petersburg Virginia 33,637 41 0 0 3
14 Front Royal, Town of Virginia 12,302 31 0 0 7
15 Waynesboro, City of Virginia 24,820 24 0 0 2
16 Frederick Water Virginia 33,022 20 0 0 1
17 Bridgewater, Town of Virginia 6,209 17 0 0 23
18 Christiansburg Town of Virginia 16,944 16 0 0 2
19 Amherst Company Service Authority (Acsa) Virginia 9,003 8 0 0 1
20 Vienna, Town of Virginia 26,138 8 0 0 0
21 City of Franklin Virginia 7,564 7 0 0 2
22 Pulaski, Town of Virginia 5,361 6 0 0 3
23 City of Buena Vista Virginia 6,643 6 0 0 1
24 R.R. Donnelley- Rcpw Virginia 5,395 5 0 0 2
25 Colonial Beach, Town of Virginia 3,802 3 0 0 1

How to read this ranking

Each row links to a full utility profile with violation history, lead testing results, and service-area ZIPs. The demographic context columns are from independent data sources (ACS, not EJScreen) and are provided for readers who want to examine equity patterns alongside the operational data.

See the full methodology for calculation details, data vintages, and known limitations.

Frequently asked questions

What is "exposure burden"?

A single score combining how many people a water system serves with how severe its federal drinking-water violations have been over the last five years. The formula is population_served × severity_score, where severity_score linearly sums contamination-related events — 10× per health-based violation, 6× per treatment-technique violation, 20× per currently-unresolved health violation — and adds a logarithmic contribution from procedural violations (2× × log10(1 + monitoring_count), 1× × log10(1 + other_count)). The log scaling prevents large utilities with many sampling sites from dominating the list purely through paperwork accumulation. Units are arbitrary — only relative ranks are meaningful. Scaled by 1,000 for display readability.

Why weight violations by severity?

A raw 5-year violation count would put systems with many late monitoring reports above systems with actual contamination events — because a large utility with 100 sampling sites failing 5% of them accumulates more MR violations than a tiny utility with real tap-water contamination. The severity weights come from the EPA Safe Drinking Water Act enforcement hierarchy: maximum contaminant level violations and treatment technique failures are Priority 1 (actual public-health risk), while monitoring/reporting violations are Priority 2 (procedural). We publish the weights so readers can recompute the ranking under different assumptions.

Why multiply by population?

Two systems with the same violation record affect very different numbers of people when one serves 500,000 residents and the other serves 3,000. A ranking of "worst systems" that ignores this conflates violation-per-system with violation-per-person-year. Population-weighting is standard in environmental-epidemiology work (e.g., "person-years at exposure") and prevents a list dominated by small rural utilities with easy-to-accumulate monitoring gaps.

Is this the same as the Most Unresolved Violations list?

No. Unresolved violations count only currently-open health-based violations as of the latest EPA snapshot — a point-in-time view of where the Safe Drinking Water Act is being violated right now. Exposure burden is a 5-year accumulated view that weights all violations by severity and population. A system with one serious contamination event affecting a large city can outrank a system with many small unresolved monitoring gaps; the two lists surface different facts.

Where does the data come from?

Violation categorization and counts come from EPA's Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS) via the ECHO enforcement database, refreshed monthly. Population served comes from EPA Community Water System Service Area Boundaries v3 cross-walked to Census 2020 population via Microsoft building-footprint weights. Demographics come from Census ACS 2019-2023.

ZipCheckup es una herramienta independiente de datos públicos. Somos un servicio de referencia, no un proveedor de pruebas de agua, remediación ni servicios públicos. Las clasificaciones reflejan datos federales de acceso público y se ofrecen con fines informativos. Para problemas con su sistema de agua específico, el proveedor local de agua o el programa estatal de agua potable son los puntos de contacto adecuados.

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