Brook Park
Brook Park, MN · 133 people served · EPA PWSID MN1580017
Brook Park (Brook Park, MN), which serves about 133 people, has recorded 2 health-based drinking-water contaminants in EPA violation records since 2016, most notably Haloacetic Acids (HAA5), Radium (226/228). Its most recent lead 90th-percentile sample was 0.0 ppb, within the 15 ppb federal action level. A certified water filter can reduce these at the tap — see the certified options for each below.
What the testing found
Measured levels from EPA violation records, compared to the federal limit (MCL). The black line marks the legal limit.
Haloacetic Acids
1.1× the federal limitChlorination byproduct; MCL 60 ug/L. Cancer and developmental concern.
Radium
Over limitRadioactive; combined radium MCL 5 pCi/L. Bone cancer risk with long-term exposure. Naturally occurring in groundwater.
Lead
Not detectedNo safe level. Damages developing brain/nervous system in children; linked to lower IQ, kidney and cardiovascular harm in adults. Usually enters water from corroding pipes/solder, not the source.
Filters certified to clean up your water
Your water shows Radium. A reverse osmosis system handles the most of this in one unit — these three are independently certified for the most of your contaminants (not marketing claims):
Haloacetic acids (HAA5) are reduced by the same activated-carbon filtration that handles trihalomethanes, so a carbon-based pick above covers them together.
Compare all certified reverse osmosis filters →
Want certainty about your tap specifically (not just the system)? A certified mail-in lab test is the gold standard — system-wide records can differ from your home's plumbing. Some links above are affiliate links — see our disclosure.
Sources & method. Contaminant levels and violations come from EPA's Safe Drinking Water Information System (health-based violations, 2016–present); PFAS from EPA UCMR5 monitoring (2023–2025). Levels shown are the highest recorded value in the violation records; a violation means the contaminant exceeded its federal limit at the system level. Your home's water can differ from the system average. Public domain data; we are not affiliated with the EPA.