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CONSUMER CONFIDENCE REPORT <br />Lead in Drinking Water <br />You may be in contact with lead through paint, water, dust, soil, food, hobbies, or your job. Coming in <br />contact with lead can cause serious health problems for everyone. There is no safe level of lead. Babies, <br />children under six years, and pregnant women are at the highest risk. <br />Lead is rarely in a drinking water source, but it can get in your drinking water as it passes through lead <br />service lines and your household plumbing system. Ramsey provides high quality drinking water, but it <br />cannot control the plumbing materials used in private buildings. <br />Read below to learn how you can protect yourself from lead in drinking water. <br />1. Let the water run for 30-60 seconds before using it for drinking or cooking if the water has not been <br />turned on in over six hours. If you have a lead service line, you may need to let the water run longer. A <br />service line is the underground pipe that brings water from the main water pipe under the street to <br />your home. <br />You can find out if you have a lead service line by contacting your public water system, or you can <br />check by following the steps at: https://www.mprnews.org/story/2016/06/24/npr-find-lead- <br />pipes-in-your-home <br />The only way to know if lead has been reduced by letting it run is to check with a test. If letting <br />the water run does not reduce lead, consider other options to reduce your exposure. <br />2. Use cold water for drinking, making food, and making baby formula. Hot water releases more lead <br />from pipes than cold water. <br />3. Test your water. In most cases, letting the water run and using cold water for drinking and cooking <br />should keep lead levels low in your drinking water. If you are still concerned about lead, arrange with <br />a laboratory to test your tap water. Testing your water is important if young children or pregnant <br />women drink your tap water. <br />Contact a Minnesota Department of Health accredited laboratory to get a sample container and <br />instructions on how to submit a sample: <br />Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Program <br />(https://eldo.web.health.state.mn.us/public/accreditedlabs/labsearch.seam) <br />The Minnesota Department of Health can help you understand your test results. <br />4. Treat your water if a test shows your water has high levels of lead after you let the water run. <br />• Read about water treatment units: <br />Point -of -Use Water Treatment Units for Lead Reduction <br />(https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/factsheet/poulead.html) <br />Learn more: <br />• Visit Lead in Drinking Water <br />(https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/water/contaminants/lead.html) <br />• Visit Basic Information about Lead in Drinking Water (http://www.epa.gov/safewater/lead) <br />• Call the EPA Safe Drinking Water Hotline at 1-800-426-4791.To learn about how to reduce your <br />contact with lead from sources other than your drinking water, visit Lead Poisoning Prevention: <br />Common Sources (https://www.health.state.mn.us/communities/environment/lead/sources.html). <br />PUBLIC WATER SUPPLY IDENTIFICATION (PWSID): 1020035 PAGE 9 <br />