Annual CCR/report context, not a live status.
Public water system profile
Sample Water System
PWSID TX0000001. This public water system profile summarizes available sample records for Schertz, including report-year context, violation records, contaminant relationships, source links, and limitations.
System identity
- PWSID
- TX0000001
- Community context
- Schertz
- State
- Texas
- System type
- Community water system
- Source water
- Purchased surface water
- Population served
- 42,000
Sample Water System and PWSID TX0000001 are demo records for the MVP. They are not official public water system data.
This profile is not a live emergency alert page. Check the utility or local/state agency for current notices.
Records are organized around PWSID TX0000001, not a citywide safety conclusion.
2024 CCR/report record found in sample data.
Latest report source shown as Demo CCR dataset.
Check the water provider or local/state authority for current notices.
System Snapshot
Available system-level context
These cards use only the current sample record fields. They should be replaced or expanded only when source-backed data is available.
Schertz
Demo CCR dataset
Historical/sample record included.
System-level field from the sample record.
Data updated 2026-05-29.
Latest Report
CCR / annual report summary
Annual water quality reports summarize a reporting period. They are historical documents, not real-time emergency alert pages.
2024 Sample Consumer Confidence Report
Demo annual report summary. A real CCR page would link to the original utility report and clearly separate report-year information from current notices.
- Report year
- 2024
- Source name
- Demo CCR dataset
- Source URL
- No direct report URL in sample data
- Source retrieved
- 2026-05-29
- Data updated
- 2026-05-29
- Last reviewed
- 2026-05-29
Use the report year, source, and retrieved date before treating a CCR summary as current context.
Official source path
Use official federal, state, utility, or report sources before treating a page as final.
Report Context
Contaminants included in this system record
These contaminants are linked to the 2024 sample report record. A listed relationship is not the same as a current advisory or a household-level finding.
Metals
Lead
Lead can enter drinking water through plumbing materials and service lines. Reports may describe lead differently from other contaminants because lead is regulated with an action level rather than a simple maximum contaminant level.
Inorganic chemicals
Nitrate
Nitrate may appear in reports when source water is influenced by fertilizer, septic systems, or other nitrogen sources.
Violations And Notices
Violation records included in this sample
Violation records can refer to different requirements and time periods. They should not be presented as current advisories unless an official current source supports that.
-
Monitoring/reporting
Record date: 2024-08-15
Demo violation record used to show how a system profile can summarize official violation history without making a broad water safety claim.
- Source name
- Demo violation dataset
- Source retrieved
- 2026-05-29
- Data updated
- 2026-05-29
Next Steps
Continue from this public water system
Use these links to confirm local context, read related explainers, and understand source limitations.
Schertz city hub
City context for possible service-area relationships and local next steps.
Texas state hub
Browse the sample state directory, source notes, tools, and education links.
Counties: Guadalupe County
County pages are a later template. This MVP keeps county context on system and city pages.
Browse contaminants
Use contaminant explainers alongside annual report tables and official source language.
How to read a water quality report
A plain-English walkthrough of Consumer Confidence Reports, including report years, detected contaminants, legal limits, violations, and source notes.
What a drinking water violation means
How to separate monitoring, reporting, treatment, and health-based violation language before drawing conclusions.
Find My Water System
Confirm the public water system tied to an address or account before relying on a local match.
Data methodology
Review source hierarchy, missing-data handling, indexing decisions, and limitations.
Data limitations
See why sample records, missing fields, and current notices need careful interpretation.