WeVote

Bill

Bill

SB 1666

SB 1666 - The act establishes "The Drinking Water Transparency and Accountability Act". Under the act, the Department of Natural Resources shall create a statewide system of accountability for community water systems and establish, by rule, a letter grade schedule to include community water system quality, performance, and sustainability based on the standards described in the act. The Department shall promulgate rules for clear and appropriate explanation for each such standard and create a tiered structure of point deductions that utilizes violation metrics as described in the act. Community water systems shall be assigned a letter grade between "A" and "F". The rules further include a provision prohibiting certain disclosures by the Department. The rules shall not deduct points for water outage or boil advisories. For water corporations, the Department shall utilize data provided by the water corporation in its most recent general rate case within the past three years. The Department shall publish scores and letter grades earned by each community water system on its website on an annual basis, including rules by which a community water system can review and appeal the Department's scores prior to website publication. Requirements and penalties for each letter classification that a community water system receives from the Department are described in the act. For any violation of the act, upon a petition from the Department, a court may appoint a receiver or fiscal administrator or to order a mandatory safe water purchase from another system as determined by the Department. The receiver's responsibilities are described in the act. The Department shall publish the first letter grade under the act no later than January 1, 2028. A community water system receiving federal funds for the upgrade, repair, or replacement of the water system infrastructure shall submit to the Department a detailed plan describing how the federal funds will be used. JULIA SHEVELEVA

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Mary Elizabeth Coleman

SB 1666 establishes new regulatory requirements for Missouri community water systems, potentially increasing compliance standards and costs while affecting drinking water safety and utility operations statewide.

Second Read and Referred S Agriculture, Food Production and Outdoor Resources Committee
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 1666

Legislative bill overview

SB 1666 establishes new regulatory frameworks for community water systems in Missouri, modifying how these utilities are overseen and operated. The bill creates provisions that affect water quality standards, system management requirements, and potentially service delivery obligations for public water suppliers serving residential communities.

Why is this important

Access to safe, reliable water is fundamental to public health and economic development. Changes to water system regulation directly affect millions of Missouri residents' drinking water quality, service reliability, and utility costs, while also impacting municipal budgets and infrastructure investment requirements.

Potential points of contention

  • Regulatory burden vs. safety: Stricter regulations improve water safety but increase compliance costs that may be passed to consumers through higher water bills
  • Small vs. large systems: Rural and smaller community water systems may struggle with compliance costs compared to larger urban systems with greater resources
  • Implementation timeline: Unclear whether existing systems will have adequate time and financial support to meet new regulatory requirements
  • Funding mechanism: Unclear whether the state provides grants or subsidies, or if costs fall entirely on local utilities and ratepayers

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.