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LINTON CITY OF vs FARGO CITY OF

Water quality comparison — risk levels, violations, PFAS records, and contaminants

Quick Answer

Both utilities share the same risk level (safe). LINTON CITY OF has 0 open health-based violations and 0 PFAS records. FARGO CITY OF has 0 open health-based violations and 116 PFAS records.

LINTON CITY OF

North Dakota · ND1500571

Overall Risk Level

No Concerns Detected

No Concern
Low
Moderate
High
Critical

Water meets all safety standards with no detected exceedances.

0

Open violations

0

PFAS records

FARGO CITY OF

North Dakota · ND0900336

Overall Risk Level

No Concerns Detected

No Concern
Low
Moderate
High
Critical

Water meets all safety standards with no detected exceedances.

0

Open violations

116

PFAS records

Head-to-Head Comparison

MetricLINTON CITY OFFARGO CITY OF
StateNorth DakotaNorth Dakota
Risk LevelNo Concerns DetectedNo Concerns Detected
Population Served1,097120,762
Open Health Violations00
Total Violations02
PFAS RecordsNone detected116
OwnershipLocalLocal
Service TypeSurface waterSurface water
City ServedLintonFargo

Key Differences

LINTON CITY OF has 0 PFAS records vs. 116 for FARGO CITY OF.

What Should I Do?

If either utility shows open violations or elevated PFAS records, consider:

  • Installing a reverse osmosis filter — removes PFAS, lead, arsenic, nitrates, and most heavy metals.
  • Requesting your utility’s annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR) for the most current test results.
  • Ordering a certified lab water test if you want contaminant-specific data for your address.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is safer — LINTON CITY OF or FARGO CITY OF?

Both utilities share the same risk level (safe). Both utilities have similar violation profiles — review the full data above to decide based on specific contaminants that concern you.

What does "open health-based violation" mean?

An open health-based violation means a water system has exceeded an EPA Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) or failed to meet a treatment technique — and the violation has not yet been resolved. These are the most serious type of water quality violations.

How current is this data?

Violation data comes from EPA's Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS), which is updated as utilities report. PFAS data comes from EPA's UCMR 5 monitoring (2023–2025). Risk levels are recalculated daily.

What does PWSID mean?

PWSID stands for Public Water System ID — a unique federal identifier assigned to each community water system. You can use it to look up a system in EPA's ECHO database.

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