Serving roughly 13,032 people in San Diego County, California.
Data current as of July 2026
🔍Straight from EPA
🧪Real Lab Results
📅Updated Quarterly
🏠Local Expertise
Results for INDIAN HILLS CAMP
1 water provider directly on file, serving roughly 13,032 people in San Diego County, California.
Quick answer: INDIAN HILLS CAMP has no violation currently counted toward its compliance status. EPA's record shows a Combined Uranium violation dating to 04/01/2024 (2 years ago) — because it's more than five years past its deadline, EPA's policy no longer treats it as part of this system's current standing, though it remains on the public record.
Lead Summary
Totalhaloaceticacids (HAA5)
TTHM
Chloroform
Bromoform
Bromodichloromethane
Dibromochloromethane
Dichloroaceticacid
Monobromoaceticacid
Dibromoaceticacid
Copper, Free
Radium-226
Radium-228
Combined Uranium
Combined Radium (-226 & -228)
Gross Alpha Particle Activity
Manganese
Conductivity (at 25°C)
Utility INDIAN HILLS CAMPPopulation served 13,032Owner Private
Older violation on record
Violations on file
Combined Uranium
Older/archived health-based violation
Found at 1 of 1 provider
A naturally occurring radioactive metal. Long-term exposure above the legal limit is associated with kidney effects and increased cancer risk.
Contaminants found
Metals
Naturally occurring or corrosion-related elements, e.g. lead, arsenic, copper
Lead Summary
Detected: 0 mg/L (ppm)
12/31/2025
Copper, Free
Detected: 540 UG/L (ppb)
9/16/2025
Combined Uranium
Detected: 140 PCI/L
8/13/2025
A naturally occurring radioactive metal. Long-term exposure above the legal limit is associated with kidney effects and increased cancer risk.
Manganese
Detected: 370 UG/L (ppb)
10/1/2025
Mainly a taste/staining concern at typical levels; long-term neurological research at high chronic exposure is ongoing.
Disinfection Byproducts
Formed when chlorine used to disinfect water reacts with organic matter
Totalhaloaceticacids (HAA5)
Detected: 12.6 UG/L (ppb)
8/13/2025
TTHM
Detected: 93.23 UG/L (ppb)
8/20/2025
A group of disinfection byproducts formed when chlorine reacts with organic matter. Long-term exposure above the legal limit has been linked to increased cancer risk in some studies.
Chloroform
Detected: 1 UG/L (ppb)
8/13/2025
One of the individual trihalomethane disinfection byproducts, formed when chlorine reacts with organic matter.
Bromoform
Detected: 54.12 UG/L (ppb)
8/20/2025
Bromodichloromethane
Detected: 6.56 UG/L (ppb)
8/20/2025
Dibromochloromethane
Detected: 32.55 UG/L (ppb)
8/20/2025
Properties
General water characteristics like pH, hardness, and cloudiness (turbidity)
Gross Alpha Particle Activity
Detected: 170 PCI/L
8/13/2025
Other
Additional substances tested that don't fit neatly into the categories above
Dichloroaceticacid
Detected: 1 UG/L (ppb)
8/13/2025
Monobromoaceticacid
Detected: 1.4 UG/L (ppb)
8/13/2025
Dibromoaceticacid
Detected: 10.2 UG/L (ppb)
8/13/2025
Radium-226
Detected: 2.09 PCI/L
8/13/2025
Radium-228
Detected: 0.089 PCI/L
6/25/2025
Combined Radium (-226 & -228)
Detected: 2.09 PCI/L
8/13/2025
A naturally occurring radioactive element found in some groundwater.
Conductivity (at 25°C)
Detected: 1600 UMHO/CM
8/13/2025
Filtration considerations: See the table below for how whole-house carbon, under-sink reverse osmosis, and under-sink carbon systems compare against what's actually on file here. These are general system types, not a specific product recommendation.