Why Boston Has the Best Tasting Tap Water in the Nation [View all]
http://www.alternet.org/why-boston-has-best-tasting-tap-water-nation
New Yorkers may disagree but Beantown's environmental protection efforts are its water's secret ingredient.
Why Boston Has the Best Tasting Tap Water in the Nation
By Daniel Moss
June 23, 2014
If you already love Boston for its unmistakable accent and unpredictable baseball team, you might want to consider adding its tap water to your list. Boston came out on top of this years tap water taste test, an annual competition hosted by the American Water Works Associationa network of more than 50,000 water professionals charged with keeping our water supply healthy. The honor was particularly fitting since the associations conference was held in Boston this year.
Forests in the protected area clean the water naturally so that by the time it gets to the city it requires only limited filtering. Theres no need for the cocktail of chemicals most cities water utilities use.Bostons secret ingredient? Watershed protection. Between 1985 and 2012, the Massachusetts Water Resources Authorityfrom which Boston buys its waterpurchased conservation land in the watersheds that feed the Quabbin and Wachusett reservoirs to the citys west, the sources of Bostons water.
Not surprisingly, the citys path to its current water purity was no walk in the park. In the early 80s, the filthy state of the Boston Harbor made national news and the Conservation Law Foundation sued state agencies for violating the Massachusetts Clean Water Act. One result of the litigation was the formation in 1985 of the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority.
On top of the billions the authority spent on restoring the Boston Harbor and Charles Riverresulting in some of the cleanest urban beaches in the countryit invested $131 million in land preservation around Bostons drinking water sources. Four hundred square miles of forest makes a protective ring around the citys two major reservoirs.
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I remember the MWRA starting their cleanup in the mid-80s. (I also remember my water bill took a large hit.)
The Charles River was disgusting, as was the smell of the water from the tap.
The Deer Island water treatment plant was built:

30 years of taking care if our infrastructure has paid off.