The Water and Wastewater Facilities and Public Drinking Water Supplies Regulations requires an owner of a “public drinking water supply” to regularly monitor drinking water quality for the parameters listed in the Guidelines for Monitoring Public Drinking Water Supplies (PDF: 205k), as well as other substances as may be required by the Minister or an Administrator. A “public drinking water supply” means a water supply system, including any source, intake, treatment, storage, transmission or distribution, that is intended to provide the public with potable piped water and that:
Public drinking water supplies are divided into two categories as follows:
Boil water advisories are issued when sampling and testing detects higher than accepted amounts of coliform bacteria or if there are deficiencies with regard to chlorination or other forms of disinfection.
To improve access to information that may assist Nova Scotians and other interested parties make informed decisions about their health, the boil water advisory lists for municipal and registered public drinking water supplies are available on the internet. The documents below list the boil water advisories that are currently in effect as of the date shown on the documents:
While every effort is made to ensure the timeliness and accuracy of the information, the Province of Nova Scotia assumes no liability or responsibility for the completeness, accuracy or usefulness of any of the information.
For more information, contact the local offices of Nova Scotia Environment or call 1-877-9ENVIRO.