Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XII— - SAFETY OF PUBLIC WATER SYSTEMS › Part Part E— - General Provisions › § 300j–18
The Administrator must run ongoing studies to find groups in the population who may face higher health risks from drinking water contaminants. The work must look at whether and how infants, children, pregnant women, the elderly, people with a history of serious illness, and other identifiable subgroups are more likely to have health problems, including cancer, from drinking water. The Administrator must report the results to Congress no later than 4 years after August 6, 1996, and update Congress as important new information appears. The Administrator must also do biomedical research to learn how chemical contaminants enter, move through, change in, and leave the human body; how contaminants cause harm (including noncancer and infectious effects); how effects vary across people and between animals and humans; and how complex mixtures in water might interact. Within 180 days after August 6, 1996, and after talking with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Secretary of Agriculture, and other federal agencies as needed, the Administrator must do studies to support the current versions of the Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule, the Disinfectant and Disinfection Byproducts Rule, and the Ground Water Disinfection Rule. Those studies must include toxicology (and, if needed, epidemiology) on developmental and birth defects and other toxic effects from disinfectants and disinfection byproducts; studies on cancer risk from disinfection byproducts from different disinfectants; and dose–response data for pathogens including cryptosporidium and the Norwalk virus. Congress authorized $12,500,000 each fiscal year for 1997 through 2003 for that work. The Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Administrator must together run pilot waterborne-disease studies in at least 5 major U.S. communities or water systems within 2 years after August 6, 1996, and must report the pilot findings and a national estimate of waterborne disease within 5 years after that date. They must also set up a national training and public education campaign on waterborne disease and seek input from scientists, health professionals, governments, groups, water systems, and vulnerable populations. Congress authorized $3,000,000 each fiscal year 1997 through 2001 for that work. If those funds are not fully provided, the Administrator may use up to $2,000,000 from the funds reserved under section 300j–12(n) and may transfer some of those funds to the CDC.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 300j–18
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73