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New Jersey water health

Flood gauges, beach advisories, drinking-water compliance, sewer overflows, and algal-bloom forecasts — one place to read whether New Jersey's lakes, rivers, and tap water are safe today. Pulls live from USGS, State EPA, EPA SDWIS, NPDES, and NOAA NCCOS.

New Jersey Flood Gauges — Live USGS River Levels

Source: U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) · live via /api/gauges

What this tracks

Real-time flood-stage status for 200+ USGS stream gauges across New Jersey watersheds. See which rivers are at action, minor flood, or major flood stage right now.

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What this means

USGS stream gauges monitor river and stream levels continuously across the U.S. Each gauge has thresholds — Action Stage, Minor Flood, Moderate Flood, Major Flood — set by the National Weather Service for the communities downstream. When a gauge crosses Action Stage, low-lying property begins to flood.

What you can do
  • If you live near a river that's at Action stage or higher, check the NWS Flood Watch / Warning page for your county.
  • Sign up for free Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) on your phone — turn them on in Settings → Notifications → Emergency Alerts.
  • Use https://water.weather.gov to see river forecast hydrographs (predicted crest height and time).
  • Never drive through standing water — 6 inches can stall a car, 12 inches floats most vehicles.
Open the full Flood gauges page →

New Jersey Beach Advisories — Live E. coli & Algal Bloom Status

Source: State Beach Monitoring Program · EPA BEACH Act · live via /api/beaches

What this tracks

Live list of New Jersey beaches under advisory or closure for E. coli, sewage, or algal blooms. State Beach Monitoring Program data updated daily.

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What this means

Under the federal BEACH Act, states test coastal and Great Lakes beaches for E. coli and enterococci during swim season (May–September in most states). A beach typically goes under advisory when E. coli exceeds 235 colonies per 100mL or enterococci exceeds 70 — the EPA thresholds linked to a ~3.6% risk of gastrointestinal illness from swimming. A closure means contamination is severe enough that the beach is closed to the public.

What you can do
  • Before swimming, check your state health or environmental agency's daily beach advisory list.
  • Avoid swallowing lake or ocean water — most bacterial risk is from accidental ingestion.
  • Don't swim within 24-48 hours of heavy rain (storm runoff carries the most contamination).
  • If you swim at an advisory beach and feel sick within 5 days, call your county health department.
Open the full Beach advisories page →

New Jersey Drinking Water Alerts — EPA & State Boil-Water Notices

Source: EPA SDWIS · state drinking water program · live via /api/drinking-water

What this tracks

Active boil-water advisories, lead-action exceedances, and EPA Safe Drinking Water Act violations for New Jersey public water systems.

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What this means

The U.S. has ~150,000 public water systems regulated under the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, which covers lead, copper, bacteria, nitrate, arsenic, PFAS, and disinfection by-products. Each state runs its own SDWA primacy program that handles violations, boil-water notices, and lead-action exceedances. EPA SDWIS aggregates the data.

What you can do
  • During a Boil Water Advisory: boil water 1 full minute before drinking, cooking, ice, or brushing teeth.
  • For lead concerns: run cold water 30 seconds before drinking if a faucet has been unused for several hours.
  • Get your annual Consumer Confidence Report from your water utility every July.
  • For wells: test annually for bacteria and nitrate, every 3 years for arsenic, every 5 years for radon.
Open the full Drinking water page →

New Jersey Harmful Algal Blooms (HAB) — NOAA Great Lakes Outlook

Source: NOAA HAB Program · EPA / state environmental agency · live via /api/algal-blooms

What this tracks

NOAA Great Lakes Harmful Algal Bloom Outlook for Lake Erie, Saginaw Bay, and other New Jersey waters. Bloom severity, location, and drinking-water risk.

Live status
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What this means

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are excessive growths of cyanobacteria (blue-green algae in freshwater) or other algae (red tide, brown tide along coasts) that can produce toxins like microcystin, brevetoxin, or domoic acid. Blooms can poison drinking water, kill fish, and cause respiratory irritation for people on shorelines. The 2014 Toledo water crisis — microcystin contamination of drinking water for ~500,000 people — was caused by a cyanobacteria bloom in western Lake Erie.

What you can do
  • Do not swim, drink, or let pets enter water that looks like spilled paint, has green or red scum, or smells musty.
  • If exposed, rinse skin and eyes with clean water immediately. Watch for nausea, vomiting, or skin rash.
  • If your drinking water comes from a surface water source (lake, reservoir, river), check your water utility's daily advisories during bloom season.
  • Report a suspected bloom to your state environmental agency (EPA / DEQ / DNR) with photos and GPS location.
Open the full Algal blooms page →

New Jersey Environmental Health Burden — CDC PLACES County Index

Source: CDC PLACES (Population Level Analysis and Community Estimates) · live via /api/places

What this tracks

Census-tract environmental health and chronic disease burden across New Jersey from CDC PLACES. Asthma, COPD, cancer, cardiovascular, and air-quality impact.

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What this means

CDC PLACES is the first national project to map chronic disease rates, health behaviors, and prevention measures at the census-tract level. It shows where asthma, COPD, cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease are concentrated — often overlapping with industrial corridors, freeway-adjacent neighborhoods, and historic redlining areas.

What you can do
  • Find your census tract's health profile at https://www.cdc.gov/places/
  • If you live in a high-asthma area, ask your doctor about an asthma action plan; many states fund home-visit programs through their Medicaid agency.
  • EPA EJScreen maps cumulative environmental risk on top of this data: https://www.epa.gov/ejscreen
  • For indoor air-quality help, your county or city health department may offer free home assessments — check their website.
Open the full Environmental burden page →
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