Skip to content
AquaCensus

Public water system · MN1180042

Active

Hills Crossing Senior Living

Community water system in Crow Wing County, Minnesota, drawing primarily on groundwater.

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

Population served

42

Service connections

1

Primary source

GW

Groundwater

System type

CWS

Community water system

System record

PWSIDMN1180042
System typeCommunity water system
Activity statusActive
Population served42
Service connections1
Primary water sourceGroundwater
Owner typePrivate
Primacy agencyMN state drinking water program
City served
StateMinnesota
ZIP

Violations & enforcement

BeganViolationContaminantHealth-basedStatus
2019-04-013A8000NoResolved

Hills Crossing Senior Living: frequently asked questions

Is Hills Crossing Senior Living's water safe to drink?

Hills Crossing Senior Living is an active community water system regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act, overseen by the MN 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 Hills Crossing Senior Living?

Hills Crossing Senior Living (PWSID MN1180042) is a private-owned community water system, regulated by the MN state drinking water program.

How many people does Hills Crossing Senior Living serve?

Hills Crossing Senior Living reports serving 42 people through 1 service connections in Crow Wing County, Minnesota.

Where does Hills Crossing Senior Living get its water?

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

Other water systems in Crow Wing County

Water systemCountyPopulation servedTypeSource
BrainerdCrow Wing14,670CommunityGroundwater
BaxterCrow Wing9,341CommunityGroundwater
CrosbyCrow Wing2,377CommunityGroundwater
Pequot LakesCrow Wing1,200CommunityGroundwater
Goodwill CrosslakeCrow Wing900Transient non-communityGroundwater
North Central SpeedwayCrow Wing900Transient non-communityGroundwater