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AquaCensus

Public water system · MI0040047

Active

Thornapple Lake Estates

Community water system in Barry County, Michigan, drawing primarily on groundwater.

Dataset updated . Source: EPA SDWIS/ECHO public records.

Population served

538

Service connections

215

Primary source

GW

Groundwater

System type

CWS

Community water system

System record

PWSIDMI0040047
System typeCommunity water system
Activity statusActive
Population served538
Service connections215
Primary water sourceGroundwater
Owner typePrivate
Primacy agencyMI state drinking water program
City served
StateMichigan
ZIP

Violations & enforcement

BeganViolationContaminantHealth-basedStatus
2021-07-01717000NoResolved
2018-06-014B8000NoResolved
2006-10-01031005NoResolved
2000-01-01233100NoResolved

Thornapple Lake Estates: frequently asked questions

Is Thornapple Lake Estates's water safe to drink?

Thornapple Lake Estates is an active community water system regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act, overseen by the MI state drinking water program. EPA SDWA violation and enforcement records for this system are being added to AquaCensus from EPA ECHO; consult EPA ECHO or your annual Consumer Confidence Report for its current compliance status.

Who runs Thornapple Lake Estates?

Thornapple Lake Estates (PWSID MI0040047) is a private-owned community water system, regulated by the MI state drinking water program.

How many people does Thornapple Lake Estates serve?

Thornapple Lake Estates reports serving 538 people through 215 service connections in Barry County, Michigan.

Where does Thornapple Lake Estates get its water?

EPA SDWIS lists this system's primary water source as groundwater.

Other water systems in Barry County

Water systemCountyPopulation servedTypeSource
Monett PwsBarry9,027CommunityGroundwater
HastingsBarry7,350CommunityGroundwater
MiddlevilleBarry3,309CommunityGroundwater
Cassville PwsBarry3,290CommunityGroundwater
Southwest Rural Water District 1Barry2,700CommunityGroundwater
Walmart #2620Barry2,000Non-transient non-communityGroundwater