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Great Lakes Well Water is a free matching service, not a contractor. We connect Michigan well owners with independent local water testing and treatment professionals.
Great Lakes WELL WATER

The arsenic corridor's flagship county

Well water treatment in Genesee County, Michigan

Genesee County holds the number that defines Michigan's arsenic story: a county median of 16.6 ug/L in a USGS and MDEQ study of well records, the highest of the nine counties studied and the only median above the 10 ug/L federal limit. For the township homes around Flint that run on private wells, that makes this county the place in Michigan where testing before treating is least optional. We connect Genesee County well owners with independent licensed local contractors who size treatment from certified lab results, free.

The Genesee County arsenic number

The nine-county study examined arsenic records from 3,022 domestic and public wells across Southeast Michigan and the Thumb. Genesee County sat at the top of it, per the county's USGS fact sheet (Haack and Rachol, 2000):

Genesee County arsenic against the federal limit
Measure Value
Genesee County median, USGS study records 16.6 ug/L
Federal limit (EPA MCL) 10 ug/L
Range of the nine county medians 2.9 to 16.6 ug/L

A median over the limit means more than half the sampled wells were over it. Read that calmly: it is a probability statement about the county, not a verdict on your tap, and plenty of Genesee wells test low. The bands and what each one calls for are laid out in Your Michigan Well Test, Explained, and the treatment lane is the arsenic removal page.

Why here? The rock under Genesee County

The Marshall Sandstone, the bedrock aquifer that runs under the Thumb and Southeast Michigan, carries naturally arsenic-rich pyrite, documented by Kolker and others, 2003 (USGS). Genesee County wells draw either from that bedrock or from the glacial deposits above it, which were partly built out of the same material. That is why two wells a road apart can disagree: the source layer, not the address, sets the odds.

The county also splits in two for water purposes. Flint and several surrounding communities run on municipal systems, which are regulated and monitored separately. This page is for everyone else: the households in Genesee County townships whose water arrives from their own well, where testing and treatment decisions belong to the owner. Iron, manganese, and hardness run through Michigan groundwater nearly everywhere, so most Genesee well reports that fail do so on more than one line; the iron and manganese and whole-house treatment pages cover those lanes.

Testing a well in Genesee County

The Genesee County Health Department Environmental Health Division, at 630 S. Saginaw Street in Flint, (810) 257-3603, is the local authority on wells here: it issues well permits, keeps well records, and runs a bacteria testing lab that accepts samples in its own sanitary bottles. Your well's construction record, if the county holds one, tells a contractor which layer the well draws from before anyone spends money.

For the chemistry that matters most in this county, arsenic plus nitrate and metals, use an EGLE-certified drinking water laboratory, and check the free well water testing guide for state-funded rounds when they open. Certified numbers are the ones treatment gets sized from.

Nearby counties in the corridor

The arsenic corridor does not stop at the county line. Two neighbors with their own pages:

Check the credentials yourself

Verify your water treatment contractor

You never have to take anyone's word for their credentials, including anyone this site matches you with. Michigan keeps public records for the people and independent listings for the equipment. Four places to look before you sign:

EGLE contractor registration

Michigan registers water well drilling contractors and pump installation contractors through EGLE under Part 127 of the Public Health Code, renewed every year. If a project touches your well or its pump, ask for the registration number and check it with EGLE.

EGLE water well contractor registration

NSF-certified equipment

Certification to an NSF/ANSI standard means an independent lab verified the claim on the label: NSF/ANSI 44 for cation-exchange softeners, 53 for named health contaminants, 58 for reverse osmosis systems. Ask which standard a proposed unit carries, then look the model up in NSF listings.

NSF standards for water treatment systems

Your county health department

County health departments issue well permits, keep well records, and run private well sampling programs. They are the local authority on your well, and MDHHS publishes statewide guidance for well owners. Neither works for any contractor, which is exactly why their answers are useful.

MDHHS well water guidance

EGLE-certified drinking water labs

EGLE certifies the drinking water laboratories whose results Michigan health departments accept. Any treatment quote should be sized from a certified lab report, and EGLE recommends testing for coliform bacteria and nitrate every year.

How to get your water tested, EGLE

Three questions worth asking any water treatment contractor

  1. 1. Are you registered with EGLE for any well or pump work this project involves, and what is the registration number?
  2. 2. Which NSF/ANSI standard is this equipment certified to, and for which specific contaminant claims?
  3. 3. Will you size the system from a certified lab result, and will the written quote list the water numbers it was designed around?

Matching through this site is not an endorsement, and these checks work on anyone. A good contractor answers all three without hesitation.

Genesee County well water questions

Is arsenic really over the federal limit in most Genesee County wells?

In the sampled record, more than half were: a county median of 16.6 ug/L means the middle well of the USGS study records sat above the 10 ug/L federal limit. That is a statement about the study sample, not a prediction for your address, because neighboring wells finished in different layers can test very differently. What it does mean is that in Genesee County an arsenic test is baseline due diligence, not an extra.

Where do I get my well water tested in Genesee County?

The Genesee County Health Department Environmental Health Division at 630 S. Saginaw Street in Flint runs a bacteria testing lab, issues well permits, and keeps well records; call (810) 257-3603. For arsenic, metals, and nitrate, use an EGLE-certified drinking water laboratory, and watch for state-funded free testing rounds through EGLE. A certified result is the one a contractor can size equipment from.

What treatment handles a Genesee County arsenic result?

EGLE guidance names point-of-use reverse osmosis and arsenic adsorption cartridges as the most effective and practical residential fixes, because drinking and cooking water is the exposure that matters. When iron or hardness fail on the same report, common in this county, a point-of-entry system can carry part of the job. Which way to go is a sizing decision made from your actual lab numbers.

Who does the treatment work in Genesee County?

An independent licensed local contractor. Great Lakes Well Water is a free matching service operated by a marketing company: we connect Genesee County well owners with a treatment professional who works this area, and that contractor quotes in writing and installs. Your agreement is directly with them, and the verification checklist on this page works on any contractor you talk to.

Genesee County result in hand?

Send your township and what the lab found. We connect you with an independent licensed contractor who works Genesee County and sizes treatment from your actual numbers, free.

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