Laserfiche WebLink
FOREWORD <br />The mission of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is to assess the quantity and quality of the earth <br />resources of the Nation and to provide information that will assist resource managers and policymakers at <br />Federal, State, and local levels in making sound decisions. Assessment ofwater-quality conditions and trends is <br />an important part of this overall mission. <br />One of the greatest challenges faced by water-resources scientists is acquiring reliable information that <br />will guide the use and protection of the Nation's water resources. That challenge is being addressed by Federal, <br />State, interstate, and local water-resource agencies and by many academic institutions. These organizations are <br />collecting water-quality data for a host of purposes that include: compliance with permits and water-supply <br />standards; development of remediation plans for a specific contamination problem; operational decisions on <br />industrial, wastewater, orwater-supply facilities; and research on factors that affect water quality. An additional <br />need for water-quality information is to provide a basis on which regional and national-level policy decisions can <br />be based. Wise decisions must be based on sound information. As a society we need to know whether certain <br />types ofwater-quality problems are isolated or ubiquitous, whether there are significant differences in conditions <br />among regions, whether the conditions are changing over time, and why these conditions change from place to <br />place and over time. The information can be used to help determine the efficacy of existing water-quality policies <br />and to help analysts determine the need for and likely consequences of new policies. <br />To address these needs, the Congress appropriated funds in 1986 for the USGS to begin a pilot program in <br />seven project areas to develop and refine the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program. In 1991, <br />the USGS began full implementation of the program. The NAWQA Program builds upon an existing base of <br />water-quality studies of the USGS, as well as those of other Federal, State, and local agencies. The objectives of <br />the NAWQA Program are to: <br />•Describe current water-quality conditions for a large part of the Nation's freshwater streams, rivers, <br />and aquifers. <br />•Describe how water quality is changing over time. <br />•Improve understanding of the primary natural and human factors that affect water-quality conditions. <br />This information will help support the development and evaluation of management, regulatory, and monitoring <br />decisions by other Federal, State, and local agencies to protect, use, and enhance water resources. <br />The goals of the NAWQA Program are being achieved through ongoing and proposed investigations of 60 <br />of the Nation's most important river basins and aquifer systems, which are referred to as study units. These study <br />units are distributed throughout the Nation and cover a diversity of hydrogeologic settings. More than two-thirds <br />of the Nation's freshwater use occurs within the 60 study units and more than two-thirds of the people served by <br />public water-supply systems live within their boundaries. <br />National synthesis of data analysis, based on aggregation of comparable information obtained from the <br />study units, is a major component of the program. This effort focuses on selected water-quality topics using <br />nationally consistent information. Comparative studies will explain differences and similarities in observed <br />water-quality conditions among study areas and will identify changes and trends and their causes. The first topics <br />addressed by the national synthesis are pesticides, nutrients, volatile organic compounds, and aquatic biology. <br />Discussions on these and other water-quality topics will be published in periodic summaries of the quality of the <br />Nation's ground and surface water as the information becomes available. <br />This report is an element of the comprehensive body of information developed as part of the NAWQA <br />Program. The program depends heavily on the advice, cooperation, and information from many Federal, State, <br />interstate, Tribal, and local agencies and the public. The assistance and suggestions of all are greatly appreciated. <br />Robert M. Hirsch <br />Chief Hydrologist <br /> <br />