Carlisle Water Trmt Plt
Filter your drinking water
PFAS 'forever chemicals' detected above the federal limit
Above the threshold where EPA says a certified filter is worth using.
Should I filter my water?
A reverse osmosis system or filter certified NSF/ANSI 58 removes >90% of PFAS. Bottled water is an alternative while the violation is open.
No action needed
Low lead service line risk
Should I be concerned?
Low proportion of lead service lines identified in this system.
No action needed
No health violations on record
What does this mean?
This system has no health-based violations on record in the EPA database. It is meeting all federal drinking water standards.
No action needed
Not detected in this water system
Chromium-6 is the contaminant from the Erin Brockovich case — it's not present in detectable amounts here.
Should I be concerned?
No. This contaminant is monitored and not detected.
Lithium not detected in this system
Not detected in this water system
Lithium occurs naturally in some groundwater sources at low levels. It is the same element used in psychiatric medication, but even elevated drinking water concentrations are thousands of times below a therapeutic dose.
Why is lithium even tested for?
EPA included lithium in its Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR5) to gather national data. There is currently no federal limit for lithium in drinking water. Monitoring it helps researchers and regulators understand where it occurs and at what levels.
| Contaminant | Detected Level | Federal Limit | How Far Over |
|---|---|---|---|
| PFOS | 9.6375 ng/L | 4 ng/L | ~2.4× the limit |
CCR data in early access — values are extracted from utility PDFs and may contain errors. Verify with your utility's 2025 CCR report.
Do you have or use a private well? Measured concentrations from nearby private wells sampled within 5 miles.
Carlisle draws from surface water — Conodoguinet Creek. Drought directly affects reservoir levels and river flow.