Village Square Shopping Center

PWSID: FL4561944

1 active health-based violation
This system currently has unresolved violations for: 5200. These violations mean contaminant levels exceeded EPA limits or required treatment was not performed.

This system has more violations on record than 73% of water systems in Florida.

Violation trend: 2.6 per year over the last 5 years.

System Details

Population Served25
Service Connections13
Water SourceGroundwater
System TypeNon-Transient Non-Community
OwnerPrivate
StatusActive
CityStuart
EPA ZIP on File34995

Areas Served

  • Port St Lucie, St. Lucie County

Lead & Copper Testing

ContaminantLevelEPA Action LevelStatus
Lead (90th percentile)0.0111 mg/L0.015 mg/LBelow Action Level
Lead (90th percentile)0.0028 mg/L0.015 mg/LBelow Action Level
Lead (90th percentile)0.0027 mg/L0.015 mg/LBelow Action Level
Lead (90th percentile)0.0018 mg/L0.015 mg/LBelow Action Level

2 Active Violations

ContaminantViolationDateHealth-BasedStatus
5200TT2025-02-01YesOpen
5200RPT2025-02-01Open

Violation History (15 total)

ContaminantViolationDateHealth-BasedStatus
3014MR2025-07-01 MajorAcknowledged
8000MON2025-07-01 MajorAcknowledged
3014MR2025-04-01 MajorAcknowledged
8000MON2025-04-01 MajorAcknowledged
8000MON2025-01-01 MajorAcknowledged
3014MR2025-01-01 MajorAcknowledged
2950MR2025-01-01 MajorAcknowledged
2456MR2025-01-01 MajorAcknowledged
8000MON2024-10-01 MajorAcknowledged
3014MR2024-10-01 MajorAcknowledged
1040MR2024-01-01 MajorAcknowledged
2456MR2015-10-01 MajorReturned to Compliance
2950MR2015-10-01 MajorReturned to Compliance

Understanding This Water System's Record

Village Square Shopping Center is a non-transient non-community water system that draws from groundwater sources and serves a population of 25 in Stuart, Florida. This page shows its complete compliance history as reported to the EPA's Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS), the federal database that tracks every public water system in the United States.

What Do These Violations Mean?

Health-based violations mean the system exceeded an EPA maximum contaminant level (MCL) or failed to provide required treatment. These indicate potential health risks from contaminants like lead, arsenic, bacteria, nitrates, or disinfection byproducts. Non-health-based violations involve monitoring, reporting, or procedural requirements — the system missed a testing deadline or failed to notify customers, but contaminant levels were not necessarily unsafe.

What Should You Do?

Your water utility is required to publish an annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR) that details test results and any violations. If your system has active health-based violations, consider a certified water filter rated for the specific contaminants involved. The contaminant guides on this site explain health risks and filter options for common pollutants. For the most current results, contact your water utility directly — EPA data can lag weeks or months behind real-time testing.