
Staten Island’s Chlorine Concerns in Tap Water
- Published:
- Updated: January 2, 2025
Summary
Staten Island residents are increasingly alarmed by high chlorine levels in tap water, prompting concerns for public health. Key points include:
- Chlorine, vital for water disinfection, can form harmful by-products, raising health risks.
- Staten Island’s water infrastructure adds chlorine, but factors like leaky pipes can affect levels.
- While chlorine prevents waterborne diseases, long-term exposure may pose health risks, prompting community concerns.
Staten Island is a place of history, community and beautiful nature. Yet beneath the surface of every day life is a question that every resident has to deal with: the quality of the water in the tap. To be precise, the use of chlorine in water treatment is increasingly troubling. Chlorine is needed to disinfect water but are we swapping one ill for another?
The Chemistry of Cleanliness: What is Chlorine?
The chlorine is a chemical compound widely used to clean water. It kills bacteria and other microorganisms, and is used in a lot of municipal water treatment. Though eliminating waterborne pathogens is a very nice thing, due to chlorine’s chemical composition it is a serious risk to the quality of water we drink. It is a halogen and will react with organics in water to form harmful by-products such as trihalomethanes and haloacetic acids.
To know how chlorine operates is to understand why its presence in our tap water is so perverse. One is that it protects us from cholera and typhoid. In the other hand, it comes at risks that are not yet understood, but potentially include cancer and heart disease in the long term. So that’s why it’s so important for us to get deeper into it.
How Much Chlorine is Too Much?
Federal regulations recommend a 4 part per million (ppm) maximum residual disinfectant level of chlorine in drinking water. This level is considered safe for humans, but since we’re all different, the level at which people are sensitive to chlorine can pose health risks even at this "safe" level. Cities such as Flint, Michigan, for example, have been hit by chlorine levels too high to be safe and the effectiveness of existing regulations doubtful.
Turn on the tap, you shouldn’t have to ring the phone and smell chemical fumes. If you are, that might mean the chlorine in your tap water is too high. And it’s not only small towns that are prone to excessive chlorine pollution; even big cities have this problem. It’s so important, then, to monitor the smell and taste of your water, and do something about it when it doesn’t sound right.
Tapped In: How Staten Island's Water Infrastructure Works
Staten Island’s water comes primarily from reservoirs and is treated in town-owned plant before it gets piped to your door. It is filtered, chemically treated and sometimes other procedures such as fluoridation are performed. We put chlorine into it as a disinfectant, so that germs and other microorganisms that can harm the environment will be destroyed.
What a lot of people don’t know is that the water from the well to your tap takes quite some time and can have a number of factors influence the quality. Pipe leaks, cross-contamination, and even season change the chlorine concentration in your water. So knowledge about the water infrastructure is not just a curiosity – it’s one of the greatest tools we have for pushing for improved water quality.

The Impact on Public Health: Chlorine's Double-Edged Sword
Chlorine’s Two-Way Saber Chlorine The Second Sword Chlorine’s Triple-Tone Blade.
It has the best anti-waterborne illness. Cholera, typhoid and dysentery outbreaks have been contained with chlorine treatments. No point overemphasising this enough: Chlorine saved millions of lives by making water potable.
But if you inhale the chemicals and their products long-term, health problems can occur. Studies have shown that chronic use of chlorine water is correlated with risk of bladder and colon cancer. These are not considered serious risks but they suggest we should look at water treatment with more careful regard.
Chlorine Concerns: The Voices from the Community
Residents of Staten Island have been increasingly vocal about their concerns regarding chlorine in tap water. Complaints range from the water’s taste and smell to skin irritations and hair loss attributed to high chlorine levels. Some residents have even joined community groups focused on water quality to voice their concerns more effectively.
Listening to the experiences of community members is critical when addressing public health issues. Staten Island officials can’t afford to ignore these testimonials, as they provide real-life context to scientific data. While anecdotal evidence should not replace rigorous scientific research, it does highlight the urgency for further investigation.
Is Your Home a Sanctuary? How Chlorine Affects Pets and Plants
Humans aren’t the only ones who have been poisoned by the chlorine in our tap water; so are our animals and plants. Chlorine is harsh on pets with delicate skin (such as cats and dogs) causing skin damage. Some fish are extremely allergic to chlorine and small amounts can kill them in the aquarium.
And household plants can die from water with high levels of chlorine. When left alone, the chlorine will burn the leaves and stunt plants. It is generally safest to use filtered water to treat pets and plants, and that is just how widespread the problem is.
Unveiling Alternatives: Other Water Treatment Methods
Chlorine is still the most common disinfectant used for water treatment, but there are alternatives. There’s ozone to disinfect water as one such solution. Ozone therapy kills bacteria in the process and does not leave any toxins behind. Another is UV water purification that kills bacteria and pathogens through ultraviolet light.
Every one of these approaches is not necessarily bad:
Ozone treatment
Very good against bacteria and viruses.
No harmful by-products
Costs more and aren’t always practical for mass deployment.
UV-based purification
Eco-friendly and leaves no residue
Ineffective against some kinds of pathogens.
Takes electricity and isn’t practical in all environments.
What You Can Do: Simple Solutions to Protect Your Health
Whenever you’re worried about the chlorine in your faucet water, there are steps you can take to keep yourself safe. Home filtration systems can get rid of chlorine and its dross from your water supply. Activated carbon filters are some of the most popular and you can mount them on your taps or in pitchers.
A quick fix is boiling water before using. A quick boil for 15-20 minutes evaporates chlorine, so the water is drier to drink and gentler on skin during bathing. If you have pets or plants using tap water, you can also leave it out for 24 hours to flush chlorine.
Policy and Advocacy: How to Make a Change
If you’re worried about the chloramine in the Staten Island water, you don’t have to do it alone. There are a few community organizations involved with water quality and are always in need of new members. Writing to your representatives and/or visiting local events are another good avenue to engage with them.
Besides the individuals, groups such as petitions and awareness campaigns can have a large impact on policy. A lot of people are talking, so local governments and water departments might put more money into alternative water treatment systems that could reduce worries about chlorine.
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