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HomeHealth and Safety CodeDiv. 104Pt. 5Ch. 5Art. 12§ 111160 Water Contamination Notification Requirements

§ 111160 Water Contamination Notification Requirements

Health and Safety Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 111160 Water Contamination Notification Requirements

Key Takeaways

  • •If the government finds that a water source might be dirty or unsafe, they have to tell the people who sell or give out that water.
  • •Within 90 days of being told, those people must test the water and send the results to the government.
  • •If the water is found to be dirty, the government can make them test it regularly and fix the problem to make the water safe.
  • •The government can say no to the usual rules if the water seller proves their water is clean or they have a better way to clean it.

Example

A company sells bottled water from a local spring. The government tests the spring and finds signs of possible pollution from a nearby farm.

The government tells the company about the possible pollution. The company has 90 days to test their water and send the results to the government. If the tests show the water is dirty, the company might have to test it every year and use a filter to clean it. If the company can show that their water is actually clean or they have a better filter, the government might not make them follow all the rules.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 111160 Water Contamination Notification Requirements

(a)  Upon a determination by the department that a particular water source is subject to potential contamination, the department shall notify the bottler, distributor, or vendor of bottled water, the owner and operator of any water-vending machine, any water hauler, any retail water facility operator, or any private water source operator of the specific contaminants or class of contaminants that pose a potential health risk. (b)  Within 90 days after notification by the department, the bottler, distributor, vendor of bottled water, the owner and operator of any water-vending machine, any water hauler, any retail water facility operator, or any private water source operator shall conduct an analysis of the water source and submit the results of the analysis to the department. (c)  If evidence of contamination is found, the department may, by order, require the bottler, distributor, vendor of bottled water, or the owner and operator of any water-vending machine, any water hauler, any retail water facility operator, or any private water source operator to conduct a source and product water analysis for the contaminants of concern in accordance with conditions specified by the department. The water analysis shall be conducted and reported on an annual basis, unless the department finds that reasonable action requires either more frequent or less frequent analysis. (d)  The department may, by order, require the bottler, distributor, vendor of bottled water, the owner and operator of any water-vending machine, any water hauler, any retail water facility operator, or any private water source operator to reduce or eliminate the concentration of any chemical that the department determines may have an adverse effect on public health. Until an enforceable standard has been established for a chemical that may have an adverse effect on human health, the department may require treatment techniques to reduce the concentration of the contaminants that require treatment, in the department’s judgment, to prevent known or anticipated adverse effects on the health of persons. The treatment system shall be designed to meet criteria designated by the department or by an independent authority approved by the department. (e)  The department may grant variances from the requirements of subdivision (d), if the bottler, distributor, vendor of bottled water, the owner and operator of any water-vending machine, any water hauler, any retail water facility operator, or any private water source operator demonstrates either of the following: (1)  That the prescribed treatment technique is not necessary to protect the health of consumers because its water source is not subject to, nor is it likely to be subject to, significant chemical contamination. (2)  An alternative treatment technique is at least as efficient in lowering the level of contaminants to be controlled. (Added by Stats. 1995, Ch. 415, Sec. 6. Effective January 1, 1996.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

contaminationtreatmentfacilityterminationhealthportconcentrationvariance

Related Statutes

  • § 111150 Bottled Water Voc Monitoring
  • § 79205 Remedial Action Plan Requirements
  • § 111070 Bottled And Vended Water
  • § 111071 Bottled Water Quality Reports
  • § 111075 Bottled Water Safety Standards

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Health and Safety Code. Section 111160.
View Official Source