Software tool helps protect Nation’s drinking water: now
available in all 50 States
Knowing the movement of contaminants, what threat they may pose
to the public, essential to a quick response
USDA Forest Service
Pacific Northwest Research Station
Portland, OR: October 10, 2006 |
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PORTLAND, Ore. October10, 2006. A new software
tool that can be used by incident commanders, water utility managers,
and others to protect community drinking water sources from contamination
during emergencies is now available in all 50 states. Preliminary
versions of the tool, called ICWater, have already been used by
water utilities and State HAZMAT (hazardous materials) response
teams in Oregon and Washington, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.
Now, the tool is available for use by every state in the Nation,
according to its developer, Douglas Ryan, a scientist at the USDA
Forest Service’s PNW
Research Station. Recognizing the need for a readily available, single source
of information, Ryan led an interagency effort to develop ICWater (pronounced “icy
water”), a tool designed to help incident commanders protect drinking water
in an emergency. He serves as the effort’s overall task manager and is
based at the PNW Research Station’s Forestry Sciences Laboratory in Olympia,
Wash.
In the United States, hundreds of thousands of bodies of surface
water—like
lakes, rivers, and reservoirs—help supply the American public with its
drinking water. If a chemical, radioactive or biological contaminant were accidentally
or intentionally introduced into a drinking water source, knowing what threat
it posed to the public would be essential for incident commanders who direct
first responders to mount an effective emergency response.
“
Incident commanders need timely and accurate information to guide
their decisions on deploying first responders to best protect
the public,” said
Douglas Ryan, manager of the Pacific Northwest Research Station’s Aquatic
and Land Interactions Program. “This information often can be drawn
from sources that already exist, but they are scattered and usually not quickly
available
to on-the-scene commanders in emergencies.”
ICWater is a computer–based
tool that integrates multiple information sources and data for incident
commanders at the scene of a surface water contamination.
With this information, it quickly produces maps, tables, and charts that
tell incident commanders if drinking water intakes are in the contaminant’s
path, and when and in what concentration the contaminant will reach the
intakes. Developing ICWater drew upon the extensive expertise of the USDA
Forest Service
in water research as well as data sources from several other agencies.
In addition to the USDA Forest Service, the Technical Support
Working Group, United States Environmental Protection Agency, Federal
Emergency Management
Agency, NOAA and Defense Threat Reduction Agency have supported this
effort. The tool
is being produced under government contract by Science Applications International
Corporation (SAIC).
To learn more about ICWater and how it works visit http://eh2o.saic.com/icwater/
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