TX0680235
TX
No open health violations

Ector County Utility District

Surface water · Local · 1039 N MOSS AVE

This page shows official EPA compliance records for Ector County Utility District, including PFAS monitoring data, violation history, contaminant test results, treatment options, and certified testing lab links for Texas.

PFAS monitoring records (UCMR 5)Available
Health-based violationsNot in current records
Contaminant test data (CCR)Not in current records
Treatment recommendationsNot in current records

Ector County Utility District is a surface water system serving 15,300 residents in Texas (PWSID: TX0680235). No open health-based violations are recorded in the EPA federal database for this system. EPA UCMR 5 monitoring returned 58 PFAS records for this utility.

At a Glance

TX0680235
Risk levelsafe
Open violationsNone on record
PFAS records58 UCMR 5 records
Population served15,300
Source waterSurface water
Data sourceEPA ECHO ↗

Intelligence Summary · Ector County Utility District

Risk LevelSafe
Open Health ViolationsNone on record
PFAS Records58 UCMR5 monitoring records on file
Population Served15,300 residents
Source WaterSurface water
OwnershipLocal
Overall Risk Level

No Concerns Detected

No Concern
Low
Moderate
High
Critical

Water meets all safety standards with no detected exceedances.

No open health violations on record. This utility has no active EPA violations involving contaminants exceeding legal limits. Always verify with your utility's Consumer Confidence Report for annual test results.

Utility Overview

Population Served

15,300

Source Type

Surface water

Ownership

Local

PWSID

TX0680235

Detected Contaminants

CCR data ingestion in progress

Contaminant detection levels from Consumer Confidence Reports are being parsed and linked to utilities. Check back soon, or view the official report directly from the EPA links below.

View on EPA ECHO

Violation History

Sourced from EPA SDWIS. Health-based violations mean a contaminant exceeded the legal limit. Monitoring/Reporting violations mean required test results were not submitted to EPA — not necessarily that the water is unsafe.

Monitoring & ReportingCryptosporidium

Resolved
Jan 2017 – Aug 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
Jul 2018 – Oct 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
Jun 2018 – Oct 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
May 2018 – Oct 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
Apr 2018 – Oct 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
Mar 2018 – Oct 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
Feb 2018 – Oct 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
Jan 2018 – Oct 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
Nov 2017 – Oct 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingColiform (TCR)

Resolved
Aug 2018 – Nov 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingLead

Resolved
Jul 2018 – Dec 2018Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingE. coli

Resolved
Jan 2023 – Jun 2023Monitoring/Reporting failure

OtherNitrate

Resolved
Jul 2023 – Nov 2023Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingLead

Resolved
Oct 2022 – Jan 2024Monitoring/Reporting failure

Monitoring & ReportingLead

Resolved
Dec 2023 – May 2024Monitoring/Reporting failure

6 additional monitoring/reporting failures

Required test submissions not filed with EPA — no contaminant data recorded. These are administrative failures, not health violations.

PFAS MonitoringEPA UCMR 5

EPA UCMR 5 monitoring (2023–2025) returned 58 PFAS records for Ector County Utility District. Detection is not a regulatory violation, but indicates PFAS compounds were measured during the unregulated contaminant monitoring cycle. Review the full records and compare detected levels against current EPA MCLs.

What should I do next?

PFAS monitoring records are on file for Ector County Utility District. Review the detected compounds, compare them with current regulatory guidance, and check whether your home filter is certified for PFAS reduction.

Ector County Utility District — Water Quality FAQs

Explore This Water System

Common Questions About This Water System

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

Related Pages

Data Sources & Provenance

All data on this page is sourced from official U.S. government or public datasets.

EPA ECHO — Water System & Compliance ReportPWSID TX0680235View source
EPA CCR — Consumer Confidence ReportsView source
Last updated: 2026-04-15
High Confidence
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At a Glance

PWSIDTX0680235
StateTexas
Risk Levelsafe
Population Served15,300
Open Health Violations0

Service area match is likely but not guaranteed. Your water bill is the most reliable way to confirm your provider.