Protecting Wisconsin's Groundwater Through Comprehensive Planning
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  Price County
  This report provides the most current information and data found, as of May 2007, unless otherwise noted.
   
  Price County groundwater findings reports Price County full report Switch to Price County full report
 

SOURCES OF DRINKING WATER

  • Wisconsin has nearly 11,500 public water systems which meet the daily water needs of about 4 million people. Public water systems that are owned by a community are called municipal water systems. Price County has 4 municipal water systems.  Table showing water systems in Price County
 

GROUNDWATER PROTECTION POLICIES   Table showing water systems in Price County

  • 2 of 4 municipal water systems in Price County have a wellhead protection plan: Park Falls and Prentice.
  • 0 of 4 municipal water systems in Price County have a wellhead protection ordinance.
  • Price County has not adopted an animal waste management ordinance.
 

MONEY SPENT ON CLEANUP

  • Over $12 million has been spent on petroleum cleanup in Price County from leaking underground storage tanks, which equates to $819 per county resident.
  • No municipal water systems in Price County have spent money to reduce nitrate levels.
 

GROUNDWATER USE    Water use figure

  • From 1979 to 2005, total water use in Price County has fluctuated from about 10.7 million gallons per day to about 9.3 million gallons per day.*
  • The fluctuation in total water use over this period is due to a fluctuations in industrial use.
  • The proportion of county water use supplied by groundwater has increased from about 17% to almost 34% during the period 1979 to 2005.*
  • Water use in Wisconsin is generally estimated for the following categories:
    • Domestic
    • Livestock
    • Aquaculture
    • Irrigation
    • Industrial
    • Commercial
    • Public use and losses
    • Thermoelectric or mining*

* Thermoelectric and mining data are not considered in water-use tables or figures on this web site. Thermoelectric-power water use is the amount of water used in the process of generating thermoelectric power. The predominant use of water is as non-contact cooling water to condense the steam created to turn the turbines and generate electricity.

 

SUSCEPTIBILITY OF GROUNDWATER TO CONTAMINANTS   Susceptibility map

  • Wisconsin has abundant quantities of high-quality groundwater, but once groundwater is contaminated, it's very expensive and often not technically possible to clean.
  • An evaluation of the susceptibility of groundwater to contamination in Price County can be seen in the FULL REPORT or accessed through the map link above.
 

GROUNDWATER QUALITY

  • 100% of 99 private well samples collected in Price County from 1990-2006 met the health-based drinking water limit for nitrate-nitrogen.   Nitrate map
  • A 2002 study estimated that 12% of private drinking water wells in the region of Wisconsin that includes Price County contained a detectable level of an herbicide or herbicide metabolite. Pesticides occur in groundwater more commonly in agricultural regions, but can occur anywhere pesticides are stored or applied.   Statewide pesticide map
  • There are no atrazine prohibition areas in Price County.
  • 100% of 1 private well sample collected in Price County met the health standard for arsenic.
 

POTENTIAL SOURCES OF CONTAMINANTS

  • There are 39 open-status sites in Price County that have contaminated groundwater and/or soil. These sites include of 26 Leaking Underground Storage Tank (LUST) sites and 13 Environmental Repair (ERP) sites.   BRRTS map
  • There is 1 concentrated animal feeding operation in Price County.
  • There is 1 licensed landfill in Price County.
  • There are no Superfund sites in Price County.

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Price County full report Price County full report
   

For more information about this web site, its contributors, and the data contained herein, click here.

For assistance in comprehensive planning, please contact Lynn Markham, UW-Stevens Point.
For assistance on groundwater, please contact Charles Dunning, USGS.
Page contact: Webmaster, USGS
Page last updated: January 14, 2008