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Water quality report

GREEN PINES S/D

CARY, NC · 0 people served · EPA PWSID NC0392135

The bottom line

GREEN PINES S/D (CARY, NC), which serves about 0 people, has recorded 2 health-based drinking-water contaminants in EPA violation records since 2016, most notably Uranium/Gross Alpha (radioactivity), Uranium. 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.

3
health contaminants on record
0
PFAS detected (UCMR5)
6
total health violations since 2016

What the testing found

Measured levels from EPA violation records, compared to the federal limit (MCL). The black line marks the legal limit.

Uranium/Gross Alpha

Over limit
Measured 16.8 pCi/L · federal limit 15 pCi/L · latest 10/01/2021 · 4 violations since 2016

Gross alpha MCL 15 pCi/L (excludes radon and uranium). Cancer risk. Naturally occurring in groundwater.

Uranium

Over limit
Measured 20.3 pCi/L · federal limit 30 µg/L · latest 10/01/2017 · 2 violations since 2016

Naturally occurring radioactive metal; MCL 30 ug/L. Kidney toxicity and cancer risk. Common in western groundwater.

Lead

Not detected
Measured 0 ppb · federal limit 15 ppb · latest 12/31/2022 · 0 violations since 2016

No 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.

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Your recommended fix

What to do about it

A certified point-of-use filter is the most direct fix for most of these contaminants. Match the filter to what's actually in your water — a filter certified for lead may do nothing for PFAS or fluoride.

Browse all certified filters Find by contaminant

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.