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Millions of Rural Americans Rely on Private Wells. Few Regularly Test Their Water.
Well-repair company owner Lynn Rosenquist (in back) and his brother, Lanny, attach the end of a cable from their crane to an old concrete casing to remove it from a well near Fort Dodge, Iowa. (Tony Leys/素人色情片Health News)

Millions of Rural Americans Rely on Private Wells. Few Regularly Test Their Water.

FORT DODGE, Iowa 鈥 Allison Roderick has a warning and a pledge for rural residents of her county: The water from their wells could be contaminated, but the government can help make it safe.

Roderick is the environmental health officer for Webster County in north-central Iowa, where a few thousand rural residents live among sprawling corn and soybean fields. Many draw their water from private wells, which are exempt from most federal testing and purity regulations. Roderick spreads the word that they aren鈥檛 exempt from danger.

More than 43 million Americans , which are subject to a patchwork of state and local regulations, including standards for new construction. But in most cases, residents are free to use outdated wells without having them tested or inspected. The practice is common despite concern about runoff from farms and industrial sites, plus cancer-causing minerals that can taint groundwater.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e cooking with it. You鈥檙e cleaning with it. You鈥檙e bathing in it 鈥 and, nowadays, there are so many things that can make you sick,鈥 Roderick said.

Federal experts of private wells have concentrations of contaminants above levels considered safe.

Iowa offers aid to homeowners who use well water. The state provides about $50,000 a year to each of its 99 counties to cover testing and help finance well repairs or treatment. The money comes from fees paid on agricultural chemical purchases, but about half goes unused every year, according to the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.

Roderick, who started her job in 2022, aims to spend every penny allotted to her county. Last spring, she snared an extra $40,000 that other counties hadn鈥檛 used. She promotes the program online and by mailing piles of postcards. Traveling the countryside in a hand-me-down SUV from the sheriff鈥檚 department, she collects water samples from outdoor spigots and sends them to a lab.

When she finds contamination, she can offer up to $1,000 of state grant money to help with repairs, or up to $500 to cap an abandoned well.

Allison Roderick, environmental health officer for Webster County, Iowa, draws a sample of well water from a home near Fort Dodge, Iowa. Roderick sends the samples to a lab to test for bacteria, nitrates, sulfates, arsenic, and manganese. She plans to add a test for PFAS chemicals. The service is free to homeowners under a state grant program.(Tony Leys/素人色情片Health News)

Experts urge all users of private wells to have them tested at least annually. Even if wells meet modern construction standards and have tested clean in the past, they can become contaminated as the water table rises or falls and conditions change above them. A faulty septic system or overapplication of fertilizer or pesticide can quickly taint groundwater.

Too many residents assume everything is fine 鈥渁s long as the water is coming out of the tap and it doesn鈥檛 smell funny,鈥 said Sydney Evans, a senior science analyst for the Environmental Working Group, a national advocacy organization that studies water pollution.

The main concerns vary, depending on an area鈥檚 geology and industries.

In Midwestern farming regions, for example, primary contaminants which can be present in agricultural runoff. and , arsenic and uranium often taint water. And, throughout the country, concerns are rising about the health effects of PFAS chemicals, widely used products also known as 鈥渇orever chemicals.鈥 A estimated at least 45% of U.S. tap water contains them.

Filters can help ensure safety, but only if they鈥檙e selected to address the specific problem affecting a home鈥檚 water supply, Evans said. The wrong filter can give a false sense of safety.

Evans said people who wonder about possible contaminants in their area can ask to see test results from wells supplying nearby community water systems. Those systems are required to test their water regularly, and the results should be public, she said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great place to start, and it鈥檚 free and easy.鈥

She also said people who rely on private water wells should ask local health officials about eligibility for help paying for testing and possible repairs or filters. Subsidies are often available but not publicized, she said.

A study by published in 2019 found that all states have standards for new well construction, and most states require permits for them. However, the researchers wrote, 鈥渆ven in states with standards for water quality testing, testing is typically infrequent or not conducted at all.鈥

A sample bottle of well water drawn by Allison Roderick, environmental health officer for Webster County, Iowa. (Tony Leys/素人色情片Health News)
Lanny Rosenquist shows a sample of mud and gravel he pulled up from the bottom of a 60-foot well that he was helping his brother, Lynn, repair near Fort Dodge, Iowa. (Tony Leys/素人色情片Health News)

Some longtime rural residents live in homes that have been in their families for generations. They often know little about their water source. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l say, 鈥楾his is the well my grandfather dug. We鈥檝e used it ever since, and no one鈥檚 had an issue,鈥欌 said David Cwiertny, director of the University of Iowa鈥檚 . They might not realize impure water can harm health over time, he said.

Some states require inspection and tests of private wells when properties are sold. Iowa doesn鈥檛 mandate such measures, although Webster County does. It鈥檚 a good idea for homebuyers anywhere to request them, said Erik Day, who oversees the private well program for the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. He also recommends asking for a technician who can run a flexible scope down the well to visually inspect the inside.

Day estimated fewer than 10% of Iowa鈥檚 private well owners have them tested annually, even though testing can be free under the state grant program.

In Webster County, Larry Jones recently took advantage of free well testing at a weathered ranch house he bought west of Fort Dodge, in a subdivision bordering a large soybean field. Jones lives next door to the 54-year-old home, and he is refurbishing it as a place for his relatives to stay.

Roderick, the county health official, sampled water from the well and found it was tainted with bacteria. She offered Jones $1,000 from the state grant to help get it fixed. He added a few thousand dollars of his own and hired a contractor.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an investment for the future,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e talking about your family.鈥

The old well was made with a 2-foot-diameter concrete casing sunk vertically in sections about 60 feet into the ground. A smaller plastic pipe ran down the middle of the casing to water at the bottom. A pump pulled water up through the smaller pipe and into the home.

Lynn Rosenquist uses a backhoe to dig out the concrete casing of an old well near Fort Dodge, Iowa. (Tony Leys/素人色情片Health News)

Lynn Rosenquist, who owns a local well-repair business, told Jones the well probably was original to the house and likely met standards when it was built. But at least one chunk of concrete had broken off and fallen in.

Repairs took two days of heavy work by Rosenquist and his brother, Lanny, who are the third generation of their family to maintain wells. The brothers used a backhoe and small crane to remove much of the concrete casing. They replaced it with a narrower, PVC pipe, which they sealed with a cement mixture to prevent seepage from the surface. When finished, they 鈥渟hocked鈥 the system with a bleach solution, then flushed and tested again.

Such modern construction is less prone to becoming tainted, Roderick said. 鈥淚f it鈥檚 not sealed airtight, bacteria can get in there and it鈥檚 just gross,鈥 she said.

Grossness is not the only thing Roderick considers. Besides E. coli and other bacteria, she tests for nitrates and sulfates, which can exist in farm or lawn runoff or come from natural sources, and for arsenic and manganese, which can occur in rock formations. She plans to add tests for PFAS chemicals soon.

She collects the water in small plastic bottles, which she mails to a lab. She enters information about each well into a state database. If the tests turn up contaminants, she advises homeowners of their options.

Roderick said she enjoys the routine. 鈥淚鈥檝e met so many people 鈥 and I鈥檝e met a lot of dogs,鈥 she said with a laugh. 鈥淚 love the feeling that I鈥檓 really helping people.鈥