Lead in water · Oregon

Oregon lead-in-water testing for schools & childcare

Oregon requires school districts, ESDs and public charter schools to test fixtures for lead under their Healthy and Safe Schools Plan (OAR 581-022-2223, referencing OAR 333-061-0400), and requires licensed/certified child care centers and family child care homes to test drinking water (OAR 414-300-0205 and 414-350-0165). A fixture at or above 15 ppb must be removed from service until remediated.

Applies to
both
Action level
15 ppb
Frequency
Schools: at least every 6 years (per OAR 333-061-0400). Child care: initial test required at/after certification (verify re-test interval with Oregon DELC).
State agency
Oregon Health Authority (OHA), Public Health Division, Drinking Water Services
State program
https://www.oregon.gov/oha/ph/healthyenvironments/drinkingwater/pages/index.aspx
Official source
https://www.oregon.gov/oha/PH/HEALTHYENVIRONMENTS/HEALTHYNEIGHBORHOODS/HEALTHYSCHOOLFACILITIES/pages/index.aspx

Schools: 'Healthy and Safe Schools Plan' (ORS 332.331 / OAR 581-022-2223; OAR 333-061-0400) requires districts/ESDs/charters to test fixtures for lead at least every 6 years. Child care: state-regulated child care providers must test drinking water for lead at least every 6 years and report to DELC. Sources: oregon.gov/ode Healthy and Safe Schools; oregon.gov/delc/providers/pages/lead-testing.aspx

Find a certified lab in Oregon

PATHWAY TO FIND A CERTIFIED LAB FOR LEAD-IN-DRINKING-WATER TESTING How drinking water lab certification works (VERIFIED, EPA): - Under the Safe Drinking Water Act, STATES hold primacy and run the certification of laboratories that analyze drinking water. Public water systems must use a state-certified lab, and EPA approves the analytical methods while states manage the certification process itself. EPA does NOT test residential/commercial water on request, and does not run a single national "find a lab" search for drinking water; it routes you to your state program. (Source: epa.gov/dwlabcert; epa.gov/lead/can-i-get-my-water-tested-lead) - EPA's own lead-in-water guidance states: testing is the only reliable way to detect lead (you cannot see/taste/smell it), and "A list of certified laboratories are available from your state or local drinking water authority or on EPA's website." STEP-BY-STEP PATHWAY: 1. Start at EPA's directory of state certification programs (the primary, authoritative entry point): https://www.epa.gov/dwlabcert/contact-information-certification-programs-and-certified-laboratories-drinking-water . This page links to a PDF and to each state's drinking-water lab certification program and contacts. 2. Use the EPA PDF "State Certification Programs Certify Laboratories to Conduct Drinking Water Analyses": https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2023-03/state-cert-programs-certify-labs-to-conduct-drinking-water-analyses.pdf 3. Contact your STATE drinking-water program (or local water authority) to obtain its current list of state-certified labs and ensure the lab is certified for LEAD in drinking water specifically. NATIONAL LOCATORS (cross-state lab search tools), use to confirm/locate accredited labs, then verify state certification: - TNI/NELAP "LAMS" (National Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Management System): searchable by lab name, TNI lab code, location, state, and accreditation body; covers environmental matrices including DRINKING WATER. Search: https://lams.nelac-institute.org/search . NELAP accreditation is delivered through state/AB accreditation bodies (e.g., FL, IL, KS, LA, MN, NH, NJ, NY, OK, OR, PA, TX, UT, VA). NELAP Accreditation Bodies list: https://nelac-institute.org/content/NELAP/accred-bodies.php - A2LA (American Association for Laboratory Accreditation): Directory of Accredited Organizations, searchable by organization/scope, including environmental/water testing scopes. Directory: https://customer.a2la.org/index.cfm?event=directory.index CRITICAL ACCURACY CAVEAT, do NOT use NLLAP for water: EPA's National Lead Laboratory Accreditation Program (NLLAP) accredits labs ONLY for lead in PAINT CHIPS, DUST WIPES, and SOIL, NOT drinking water. Do not present NLLAP (epa.gov/lead/national-lead-laboratory-accreditation-program-list) as a locator for lead-in-WATER labs. NLLAP recognizes accrediting bodies AIHA-LAP, A2LA, Perry Johnson Laboratory Accreditation, ANAB/ACLASS, and International Accreditation Service. Note A2LA appears in both contexts (paint/dust/soil via NLLAP AND, separately, environmental water testing via its general accreditation), so always check the lab's specific scope/matrix. BOTTOM-LINE GUIDANCE FOR SCHOOLS/CHILDCARE: Use a lab that is certified BY YOUR STATE for lead in drinking water. Begin at the EPA state-certification directory, then verify via TNI LAMS or A2LA. Confirm the lab's scope explicitly covers lead in drinking water (not paint/dust/soil).

For the full federal framework (EPA 3Ts, LCRI action level, WIIN funding), see the lead-in-water overview.

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Reviewed by The LabVetted editorial team · Compiled from official EPA & state sources, June 25, 2026. Confirm current accreditation directly, how we verify.

Information only, not legal or compliance advice. Requirements change; confirm current rules with Oregon Health Authority (OHA), Public Health Division, Drinking Water Services via the official source above.

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