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Home | Data and Monitoring | Beach Health |
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Beach Health
What's New
Background Each year, states report thousands of beach closings at rivers, lakes and oceans due to disease-causing microorganisms. Many other beaches also may be polluted, but if the water is not monitored and the results are not posted, beachgoers will not know whether they run the risk of getting sick. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is concerned with public health risks posed by contaminated beach water. As a result, EPA is initiating the Beaches Environmental Assessment, Closure and Health (BEACH) Program to strengthen U.S. beach programs and water quality standards, better inform the public, and promote scientific research to further protect the health of beachgoers. As part of the BEACH Program, the U.S. EPA will improve laboratory test methods for detecting contaminants in beach water, invest additional resources in beach water quality health and testing methods research, and help state, local and tribal government agencies adopt and carry out routine water quality monitoring programs. The U.S. EPA Great Lakes National Program Office is supporting the Great Lakes Commission in using the Great Lakes as a pilot for communicating the results of USEPA's National beach survey a beach health survey, assessing the current degree of consistency with beach closure and restriction advisories, generating a report of action items, and expediting a Great Lakes mapping effort that will connect with and enhance a national database. |
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