Windham County, CT Water Quality (2026): PFAS & Lead

Windham County, Connecticut: drinking water report. Windham County in northeastern Connecticut – the "Quiet Corner" – has about 117,000 residents in…

Water Quality in Windham County, CT

Windham County in northeastern Connecticut – the "Quiet Corner" – has about 117,000 residents in communities including Willimantic, Putnam, and Danielson. Most water comes from small municipal systems and private wells drawing from glacial and bedrock aquifers. The county's textile mill history left contamination at numerous sites along the Quinebaug and Shetucket Rivers.

What the Data Shows

Mill-era contamination includes chlorinated solvents, petroleum products, and heavy metals at sites throughout the river valleys. According to Connecticut DEEP's 2024 site assessment database, Windham County has 42 properties with documented groundwater contamination, many tied to former textile finishing and dyeing operations that used solvents freely.

The Windham Airport has documented AFFF use, and CT DEEP's 2024 PFAS investigation found PFOS at 11 ppt in monitoring wells near the facility. Naturally occurring arsenic in bedrock wells is another concern – the USGS's 2024 New England bedrock study found that 10% of wells in Windham County's metamorphic rock formations exceeded the 10 ppb MCL.

What Residents Should Do

Windham County's many small water systems and high proportion of private wells mean water quality is a local issue rather than a county-wide one. If you are on a private well, testing for arsenic, VOCs (if near a former mill site), and PFAS gives you the full picture.

Check your water for any available data. For the range of contaminants possible in this area, reverse osmosis provides the broadest household protection. Our water filter guide covers well water systems for New England geology. Get your detailed report for context, and visit our Connecticut page for statewide data.