Cole County, Missouri: drinking water report. Cole County in central Missouri has about 77,000 residents, with Jefferson City – the state capital – as the…
Cole County in central Missouri has about 77,000 residents, with Jefferson City – the state capital – as the county seat. The Missouri River provides the primary water source, with Jefferson City Water Division operating the treatment plant. The Missouri River at Jefferson City carries agricultural and municipal inputs from its upstream watershed, including seasonal pulses of herbicides and nutrients.
The Missouri River's agricultural load defines the raw water quality at Jefferson City. According to the Missouri DNR's 2024 river monitoring data, atrazine peaked at 2.3 ppb during spring at the Jefferson City intake – below the MCL of 3 ppb but consistently present during the planting season. Nitrate averaged 3.8 mg/L during the same period.
The Jefferson City Memorial Airport has documented AFFF use. Missouri DNR's 2024 PFAS investigation found PFOS at 6 ppt in monitoring wells near the facility. The EPA's UCMR5 data showed low-level PFAS in the Jefferson City system consistent with both airport and diffuse urban sources.
Jefferson City's Missouri River water is well-treated, but the agricultural contaminant pulse during spring means raw water quality fluctuates seasonally. Treatment handles the variation, but a household filter adds a consistent baseline.
Check your water for seasonal data. A carbon filter handles atrazine and taste effectively. For PFAS, reverse osmosis adds broader protection. Our water filter guide covers both options. Get your detailed report for seasonal patterns, and visit our Missouri page for statewide context.