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EVOLUTION OF WATER QUALITY REGULATION IN THE UNITED STATES: A HISTORICAL REVIEW AND IMPLICATIONS FOR NEW YORK CITY

SANTUNU BARUA

Vol 21, No 3 ( 2026 )   |  DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18932762   |   Author Affiliation: MS in Environmental Engineering, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Manhattan University, New York, USA.   |   Licensing: CC 4.0   |   Pg no: 35-44   |   Published on: 10-03-2026

Abstract

This comprehensive review examines the historical evolution of water quality regulation in the United States from 1972 to the present, with particular emphasis on implications for New York City's complex water management system. The Clean Water Act of 1972 and Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 established foundational federal frameworks that shifted regulatory authority from states to the federal government, though implementation remains substantially decentralized. This review traces the development of regulatory approaches through four distinct periods: (a) early regulatory development emphasizing command-and-control mechanisms and cooperative federalism (1970-1990); (b) evolution toward numeric and biological water quality criteria (1990-2010); (c) New York City's innovative Watershed Protection and Partnership Program as a case study in watershed-scale governance (1997-present); and (d) contemporary challenges including emerging contaminants, environmental disparities, and climate change. The analysis reveals that while regulatory frameworks have become increasingly sophisticated, persistent gaps remain in protecting private wells, controlling nonpoint-source pollution, and addressing emerging contaminants such as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and microplastics. Furthermore, regulatory structures create and perpetuate environmental inequities, with vulnerable communities experiencing disproportionate exposure to water quality hazards. The review concludes that effective future water quality governance requires not merely technical improvements but fundamental commitments to environmental justice, strengthened federal oversight, and adaptive regulatory frameworks capable of responding to novel challenges. Policy recommendations include expansion of SDWA authority to private wells, reduction of agricultural exemptions from Clean Water Act permitting, clarification of EPA authority over emerging contaminants, and explicit equity commitments in resource allocation and governance structures.


Keywords

Water Quality Regulation, Environmental Law, Safe Drinking Water Act, Clean Water Act, Environmental Justice, Emerging Contaminants, Watershed Management, New York City.