Official EPA Records
Cleveland County Water
Official EPA contamination & sampling records · Lawndale, NC
What official records show
Health violations
None
None recorded in EPA SDWIS
PFAS detected (UCMR 5)
None
116 monitoring samples — no detections above MRL
Above MCL level (monitoring)
None
No PFAS above EPA MCL thresholds in monitoring data
EPA compliance records for Cleveland County Water (PWSID: NC0123055) in Lawndale, NC show no health-based violations in EPA SDWIS and no PFAS detections above the minimum reporting level in EPA UCMR 5 monitoring. All records on this page are sourced from EPA SDWIS and the UCMR 5 dataset. This is official monitoring data — not a health risk determination.
Official Water Sampling Events (EPA UCMR 5)
EPA UCMR 5 monitoring conducted 5 sampling events at Cleveland County Water. Each event tests water drawn from a designated sampling point for PFAS compounds. Source: EPA Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule 5, 2023–2025.
| Sample date | Compounds tested |
|---|---|
| January 2024 | 25 |
| December 2023 | 4 |
| August 2023 | 29 |
| May 2023 | 29 |
| February 2023 | 29 |
Sampling events represent distinct official water sample records from EPA UCMR 5. Learn about UCMR 5 methodology ↗
PFAS Monitoring: No Detections Above MRL (EPA UCMR 5)
EPA UCMR 5 monitoring recorded 116 sampling results for Cleveland County Water. No PFAS compounds were detected above the minimum reporting level in any sample. This means measured concentrations — where present — were below the laboratory's minimum quantifiable threshold, not necessarily zero.
View full PFAS monitoring table →What this does not mean
- —Violations do not indicate current non-compliance. A health-based violation that is marked resolved means the utility has returned to compliance per EPA records. Historic violations are shown for transparency, not to imply ongoing risk.
- —PFAS detections above MRL are not themselves violations. UCMR 5 monitoring is a surveillance program. Detection does not mean the utility violated a regulation. The 2024 EPA PFAS rule (MCLs for PFOA, PFOS, etc.) has a compliance deadline of 2029.
- —This page does not assess health risk. WaterUtilityReport.com presents official government records — we do not make health risk determinations, safety certifications, or compliance judgments. Consult a licensed water quality specialist or physician for health advice.
- —Records may be incomplete. EPA SDWIS and UCMR 5 represent what was reported to the EPA. Not all utilities or contaminants are covered. Small systems (<10,000 people) may not have been required to participate in UCMR 5 monitoring.
Independent Verification
Get your water tested by a certified lab
EPA compliance data shows what utilities report to regulators. An independent test from a certified laboratory confirms what is actually coming out of your tap at the point of use. Labs in North Carolina can test for PFAS (EPA Method 533 or 537.1), lead, nitrates, bacteria, and more.
Official Records FAQs
Official Data Sources
EPA SDWIS — Compliance & Violations
EPA ECHO: Cleveland County Water Detailed Facility ReportEPA UCMR 5 — PFAS Monitoring Data
EPA UCMR 5 Program OverviewEPA PFAS Rule (April 2024)
EPA PFAS in Drinking Water RuleRelated pages
Public drinking water datasets may not include every recent test, private well result, household plumbing issue, or local advisory. Use this page as a starting point, not as a substitute for official guidance, your utility's Consumer Confidence Report, or professional testing.
Water Utility Report summarizes public records from official federal, state, utility, or testing datasets where available. For urgent health or compliance questions, contact your utility, local health department, or the EPA directly. How Water Utility Report uses public drinking water data