Water Quality: Deer Creek, OK
1 water system • 147 people served
Multiple Health ViolationsWater Quality Summary
Deer Creek is served by 1 public water system with a combined service population of 147 people, and has 204 EPA Safe Drinking Water Act violations on record. Critically, 71 of those are health-based violations, meaning one or more contaminants were detected above EPA-established safe levels — a serious public health concern. Deer Creek's violation count is 23% below the national average for Oklahoma. Contaminants associated with violations include Barium, Nitrate, Nitrate-Nitrite, Stage 2 DBP, Total Organic Carbon.
Contaminants Found
Increases blood pressure and causes cardiovascular effects with long-term exposure.
Common source: Natural rock deposits, oil drilling operations, coal power plant waste
EPA limit: 2 mg/L
Causes methemoglobinemia (blue baby syndrome) in infants, reducing the blood's ability to carry oxygen.
Common source: Fertilizer runoff, septic systems, animal feedlots, natural deposits
EPA limit: 10 mg/L (as nitrogen)
Causes methemoglobinemia in infants and may pose cancer risks with long-term exposure.
Common source: Fertilizer runoff, septic systems, animal feedlots, natural deposits
EPA limit: 10 mg/L (as nitrogen)
Trihalomethanes and haloacetic acids that increase cancer risk and may cause adverse reproductive outcomes.
Common source: Chlorine disinfection reacting with natural organic matter in source water
EPA limit: TTHM: 0.080 mg/L; HAA5: 0.060 mg/L
Not a direct health risk but reacts with disinfectants to form carcinogenic byproducts such as trihalomethanes.
Common source: Decaying plant material, algae, soil organic matter in source water
EPA limit: Treatment technique (must reduce TOC based on source water level)
Water Systems Serving Deer Creek
| System Name | PWSID | Source | Population | Violations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DEER CREEK | OK2002711 | Groundwater | 147 | 204 |
Concerned About Your Water?
A home water filter can remove common contaminants. NSF-certified filters are tested against EPA standards.
Consider a reverse osmosis system for comprehensive filtration or a carbon filter for basic improvement.
Other Cities in Oklahoma
Data Sources
Drinking water violation data from the EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS). Data includes all recorded violations for active community water systems.