Delaware Water Systems Serving the Most Disadvantaged Populations — 2026

Delaware community water utilities serving populations with the highest combined percent of non-white residents and households below 200% of the Federal Poverty Level (Census ACS 2019-2023, aggregated via EPA CWS Service Area Boundaries v3).

24 Systems
ranked
22,183 PWSIDs
with demographic data
2019-23 Census ACS
vintage
EPA v3 CWS service area
boundaries (March 2026)
How to read this list Systems serving the highest combined percent of non-white residents and households below 200% of the Federal Poverty Level. Within-size-class percentiles are used to neutralize the confound of system size. A cap of five systems per state is applied to produce a nationally-representative list. See the methodology page for calculation details.

These 24 Delaware water utilities serve populations with the highest combined percent of non-white residents and households below 200% of the Federal Poverty Level. Within-size-class percentile rankings neutralize the confound of system size; no geographic cap is applied at the state level because all utilities are within a single state.

RankWater SystemStatePop servedEquity score% PoC served% Below 200% FPLUnresolved violations
1 Georgetown Water Department Delaware 5,380 84.5 52% 43%
2 Dover Water Department Delaware 41,793 75.2 54% 34% 1
3 Wilmington Water Department Delaware 94,650 73 57% 32%
4 Seaford Water Department Delaware 6,693 71.6 42% 35%
5 Municipal Services Commission Delaware 7,405 67.6 65% 26%
6 Garrison Lake Pump District Delaware 7,204 66.8 50% 29%
7 Laurel Water Department Delaware 3,411 65.6 32% 35%
8 Milford Water Department Delaware 8,337 63.2 37% 31%
9 Camden Pump District Delaware 9,861 59.4 43% 26%
10 Church Creek (Awc) Delaware 8,341 56 41% 25%
11 Veolia Water Delaware, Inc. Delaware 87,553 54.4 46% 22%
12 Newark Water Department Delaware 29,288 53.4 34% 26%
13 Long Neck Water Company Delaware 6,316 50.8 26% 28%
14 Millsboro Water Department Delaware 6,523 49.2 25% 28%
15 Smyrna Water Department Delaware 11,034 47.9 42% 18%
16 Artesian Northern Kent Regional Delaware 6,255 46.4 40% 18%
17 Artesian Northern Sussex Regional Delaware 4,644 42.7 22% 25%
18 Willow Grove Mill Delaware 7,748 39.4 40% 13%
19 East Ncc District Delaware 3,486 38.6 40% 12%
20 Artesian Water Company Delaware 180,843 37.2 50% 22%
21 Harrington Water Department Delaware 3,337 26.4 16% 18%
22 Artesian Southern Sussex Regional Delaware 4,692 26 16% 18%
23 Bethany Bay Pump District Delaware 12,141 23 12% 20%
24 Lewes Board of Public Works Delaware 9,247 21 13% 17%

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 does the "equity score" mean?

A 0-100 composite that combines two within-size-class percentile ranks: (1) percent of population served that is non-white (Census ACS B03002), and (2) percent below 200 percent of the Federal Poverty Level (Census ACS C17002). Within-size-class comparison (small, medium, large) is used because small rural systems and large urban systems have structurally different demographic profiles; mixing them in a single ranking produces a methodologically weak list dominated by size rather than disparity.

Why is the list capped at 5 systems per state?

Without a cap, the list concentrates in states with large numbers of historically disadvantaged small-to-medium systems (Texas, California). A geographic diversity cap produces a more nationally-representative snapshot. Per-state rankings, if available, show the full within-state comparison without a cap.

Does this claim discrimination?

No. It reports a demographic fact: these water utilities serve populations that are more non-white and lower-income than the national median, after controlling for system size. Causation — why that pattern exists — is a separate research question requiring different data and methods.

ZipCheckup is an independent public-data tool. We are a referral service and do not provide water testing, remediation, or utility services. Rankings reflect publicly-available federal data and are provided for informational purposes. For issues with your specific water system, contact your local water utility or state drinking water program.

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