Email @ireland.com
Find your ancestorsA "REMEDIAL action list" of defective or potentially defective water supplies is being compiled by the Environmental Protection Agency in a bid to ensure local authorities take adequate steps to protect human health.
The agency, which was commenting in the wake of a new cryptosporidium outbreak in Galway this week, said it had acquired new powers to oversee local authorities and to compel them to carry out repairs to drinking water supplies.
In a statement issued yesterday, the EPA recalled that its report, Provision and Quality of Drinking Water in Ireland: A Report for the Years 2006-2007, launched earlier this year, had identified 339 public water supplies that required examination from source to consumer, to determine the need for replacements or upgrades.
The EPA said it had asked local authorities to carry out this examination and results were now being analysed to place relevant water supplies on the "remedial list".
In some cases this may result in legally-binding directions being issued to local authorities requiring specific works to be carried out. Currently local authorities are required to notify the EPA and the HSE where there is a risk to human health from water supplies. The EPA said its priority was to ensure a secure drinking water supply for the public.
In future, any action that the local authority might take, including the issuing of a "boil water" notice, has to be taken in consultation with and with the agreement of the HSE.
Should a drinking water supply become unsafe for consumption at any time, consumers must be notified promptly by their local authority and advised of what precautions to take.
© 2008 The Irish Times
This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times


A catholic approach to learningAs keeper of the Catholic flame, Bishop Leo O'Reilly is keen to ensure that matters of faith are still given robust consideration in a new educational landscape which reflects the diversity of a new Ireland
Learning to box clever for lunchBringing your own food to work - whether it is a sandwich or something more exotic - is a surefire way to trim the fat from your expenditure as these financially challenging times begin to bite
Fruit of their own endeavoursWhen children grow and pick their own fruit and veg, they will eat it - some schools have found
Tackling the poetry patriarchyIrish poetry operates in something of a male-dominated culture, but is being a female poet a raison d'etre or a clunky categorisation? Fional McCann canvasses five well-versed women
Trainee teachers face unsure futureThere was no talk of recession or education cuts when the current cohort of trainees signed up to become secondary school teachers. But things have changed and, uncertain of getting a job, some are even thinking of emigrating