Marine and Freshwater Beach Testing in Massachusetts Annual Report
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Marine and Freshwater Beach Testing in Massachusetts Annual Report: 2011 Season Massachusetts Department of Public Health Bureau of Environmental Health Environmental Toxicology Program http://www.mass.gov/dph/beaches.htm May 2012 This page is intentionally left blank. 2 PART ONE: THE MDPH/BEH BEACHES PROJECT 5 I. Overview ......................................................................................................7 II. Background ..................................................................................................8 A. Beach Water Quality & Health: The Need for Testing...................................................... 8 B. Establishment of the MDPH/BEH Beaches Project.......................................................... 8 III. Beach Water Quality Monitoring...................................................................11 A. Sample collection.............................................................................................................. 11 B. Sample analysis................................................................................................................ 11 1. The MDPH contract laboratory program ...................................................................... 11 2. The use of indicators .................................................................................................... 12 3. Enterococci................................................................................................................... 12 4. E. coli............................................................................................................................ 13 5. Laboratory Methods ..................................................................................................... 13 6. Bacterial Standards ...................................................................................................... 13 C. Reporting .......................................................................................................................... 14 1. The Beaches Website .................................................................................................. 14 2. Exceedances: Beach Closures & Public Notification ................................................... 15 3. Data Management........................................................................................................ 16 D. Quality Assurance............................................................................................................. 16 E. The Tier System and Frequency of Testing ..................................................................... 16 1. The Three Tiers............................................................................................................ 17 2. Sanitary Surveys and Variances .................................................................................. 17 F. Forms................................................................................................................................ 18 IV. Historical Activities........................................................................................18 A. Training............................................................................................................................. 18 B. Emergency Response ...................................................................................................... 18 V. Limitations ....................................................................................................18 PART TWO: THE 2011 BATHING SEASON 21 I. MDPH ACCOMPLISHMENTS......................................................................23 A. Beaches Website/Data Management ............................................................................... 23 B. Trainings ........................................................................................................................... 23 C. Quality Assurance............................................................................................................. 24 D. Laboratory Program.......................................................................................................... 24 II. MONITORING ..............................................................................................25 A. Results.............................................................................................................................. 25 1. Marine Beaches ........................................................................................................... 25 2. Freshwater Beaches .................................................................................................... 27 B. Analysis of Results ........................................................................................................... 28 III. FUTURE PLANS ..........................................................................................34 A. Direct Web-Based Reporting............................................................................................ 34 B. Training and Community Outreach................................................................................... 34 C. Sanitary Surveys............................................................................................................... 34 IV. SUMMARY ...................................................................................................36 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 37 3 REFERENCES 39 TABLES 42 FIGURES 89 APPENDICES 109 A. General Laws of Massachusetts .....................................................................111 B. Massachusetts State Regulations ...................................................................117 C. Federal BEACH Act ........................................................................................129 D. Massachusetts’ Beach Act ..............................................................................141 E. MDPH Beach Sampling Data Form.................................................................147 4 PART ONE: THE MDPH/BEH BEACHES PROJECT 5 This page is intentionally left blank. 6 I. OVERVIEW There are over 1,000 public and semi-public bathing beaches in Massachusetts, both freshwater and marine. Depending on weather and a variety of other changing conditions, beach water sometimes contains bacteria at levels that can cause health problems such as sore throat, gastroenteritis, or even meningitis or encephalitis.1 Therefore, it is critical to ensure that bacteria levels at beaches are monitored, and that such levels are acceptable and within public health standards. In 2011, bacteria levels that exceeded public health standards were detected on 915 different occasions across the state, resulting in temporary beach closures. This represents 5.8% of all samples collected during the 2011 season. In Massachusetts, bathing beach water quality is regulated by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH) under Massachusetts General Law2 and the Code of Massachusetts Regulations.3 These require that all public and semi-public bathing beaches (e.g., beaches at camps, campgrounds, hotels, condominiums, country clubs) in the state be monitored for bacterial, and on occasion other environmental contamination during the bathing beach season. The exact dates of a given bathing season vary from beach to beach, and are determined by the operators of each individual beach. Some beaches open as early as Memorial Day, but the majority begin operation when the school year ends in mid-June, and most close for the season during the week of Labor Day. The vast majority of beach water sampling in Massachusetts is conducted by local boards of health, the Barnstable County Department of Health and the Environment, and the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation (MDCR). Most marine beach samples are analyzed at laboratories under contract with MDPH’s Bureau of Environmental Health (BEH). MDPH/BEH utilizes both state and federal Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) funds to support these costs. Most freshwater samples are analyzed at private laboratories hired by beach operators or boards of health, while a small number are analyzed at municipal laboratories. Bathing water samples that are found to contain levels of bacterial contamination in excess of regulatory standards are termed exceedances. If water samples from a beach are found to be in exceedance of regulatory standards, the beach waters must be closed. When this happens signs must be posted at access points to the beach notifying the public that swimming is unsafe due to bacterial contamination. For marine beaches, the public is also notified via the Beach Water Quality Locator, on the MDPH/BEH website, which is operated in collaboration with local health officials and MDPH contract laboratories.4 Local health officials and MDPH/BEH contract laboratories collect and analyze the samples and perform a majority of the data entry onto the website. MDPH/BEH is notified of exceedances within 24 hours (105 CMR 445.040). Beaches are to remain closed until their bacteria counts 1 Cabelli, 1983; USEPA, 1986; Cabelli, 1989; Haile, 1996; Pruss, 1998. 2 MGL Chapter (C) 111, § Section (S) 5. See Appendix A. 3 105 CMR 445.000: Minimum Standards for Bathing Beaches (State Sanitary Code, Chapter VII). See Appendix B. 4 The address of the MDPH/BEH website can be found on the cover of this report. 7 decrease to levels below the applicable standard, at which point the postings can be removed and MDPH/BEH is notified of the beach reopening.