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Spokane water report: low PFAS detections, conservation plan update, aquifer ILA and solar grant

3850807 · June 16, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

City staff told a council subcommittee the 2024 water-quality report meets EPA standards though low PFAS detections warrant monitoring; staff also described a 5-year water conservation plan update, an interlocal agreement for the Aquifer Protection Area on the August ballot, and a Commerce grant for solar charging at the water facility.

City water officials told a Spokane City Council subcommittee on June 15 that the city’s 2024 annual water-quality report meets state and federal standards but includes “low level detections” of PFAS chemicals in three wells and that staff are monitoring one Ray Street well whose single-sample result exceeded the 4 parts-per-trillion action level.

“What we’re talking about is very, very small,” a water department director said, noting the system’s four-quarter rolling average for Ray Street remained below the 4 parts per trillion action level. The department said it conducts roughly 2,000 tests a year and currently complies with EPA requirements.

Why it matters: PFAS (commonly known as “forever chemicals”) have become a focus of public…

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