It’s important that residents and visitors to towns with untreated water supplies are aware of the town’s water quality and its fit-for-purpose use.
Where a town or rural pipeline water supply is not treated, the water is not safe drinking, food preparation, ice making, cleaning of teeth or any other human consumption purposes.
The water is suited for household activities, such as watering gardens, flushing toilets, showering/bathing, irrigation and laundry. Caution should be taken to avoid contact with broken skin or wounds.
GWMWater works with local councils to remind customers, by placing signage at public taps, that the water is not treated and is not fit for human consumption.
GWMWater monitors the water quality of untreated water supply towns and results are available upon request.
To find out which towns receive an untreated water supply, please visit our website at gwmwater.org.au/check-your-water-supply or contact us on 1300 659 961.
To ensure public safety, we ask that you:
- Don’t use the town or rural pipeline water supply for drinking, food preparation, ice making, cleaning of teeth or any other human consumption purposes.
- Avoid swallowing the water e.g. while showering or bathing.
- Avoid contact with broken skin or wounds.
- Consider disconnecting the town or rural pipeline water supply from areas which may encourage drinking or accidental swallowing.
- Make sure no cross-connections exist between the town or rural pipeline water supply and your drinking water source.
- Advise visitors to your home and your town not to drink the town water supply.
Landlords:
Landlords must let tenants know if their water is untreated and not fit for human consumption. To assist landlords, we can provide suitable handouts free of charge.
Please see the below handouts or contact us on 1300 659 961 during business hours to request copies. You are also welcome to call us to talk to a staff member about your or your tenant's water supply.
Businesses and Councils:
We ask councils, managers of commercial businesses and community groups (such as hotels, motels, caravan parks, bed and breakfast houses and club houses, etc.) in towns that do not have a drinking water supply to:
- Mount and maintain signage on or next to taps in public areas e.g. parks, public toilets, schools, caravan parks, club houses, sporting venues and halls.
- Advise guests that the water at your establishment is untreated and is not fit for human consumption.
Suitable signage and publications are available, free of charge, from GWMWater:
- Do not drink the water signs and stickers - available in two sizes.
- 'Living with an untreated water supply brochure' brochure.
- Untreated water supply poster for placement above sinks in community accessed kitchens and bathrooms.
- Untreated water supply notice listing towns and rural pipelines that do not receive a drinking water supply.
To order any of the above, please complete our order form at gwmwater.org.au/uws-order or contact us during business hours on 1300 659 961.
For further information, please contact us on 1300 659 961.
The Horsham SmartWater and Integrated Water Management Project is an innovative recycled water project which will support agricultural research activities and provide opportunities to expand recycled water use in the municipality.
The project involves construction of infrastructure that will improve the quality and accessibility of Horsham’s recycled water broadening its sustainable use in agriculture and irrigation of green areas in Horsham.
About the SmartWater Project
The project is jointly funded by the Commonwealth Government’s National Water Grid Authority, Agriculture Victoria and GWMWater.
The project has four components:
- Construction of small-scale desalination plant and upgrade of irrigation infrastructure at Agriculture Victoria’s Horsham SmartFarm;
- Construction of a Dissolved Air Flotation treatment facility at GWMWater’s Horsham Wastewater Treatment Plant, to improve the quality of the recycled water;
- Construction of a recycled water pipeline to connect recycled water to green spaces in Horsham including the racecourse, cemetery and Dudley Cornell park;
- Additional stormwater drainage and green-space connections, funded by the Victorian Government’s Integrated Water Management program, Horsham Rural City Council and GWMWater.
Construction work is already underway at the Horsham SmartFarm and all project components are expected to be completed in the second half of 2023.
This project will ensure that the Horsham SmartFarm remains at the cutting edge of international agricultural research and will enable more opportunities for Horsham to use its water sustainably.
Access to recycled water
GWMWater is working closely with Horsham Rural City Council and other potential re-use customers to identify opportunities for recycled water use at green spaces in the municipality, providing both sustainable and cheaper access to fit-for-purpose water.
There is approximately 400ML/year of additional recycled water available for allocation to other users which would be suitable for a variety of uses including pasture, vineyard or food crop irrigation. If you are interested in receiving a recycled water supply, please submit an Expression of Interest form. Visit gwmwater.org.au/horshamrecycledwatereoi for more information.
Please refer to GWMWater's Undetected Leaks and Unexplained High Usage Policy for more information.
Further information…
- Section 273A of the Water Act 1989 > https://www.legislation.vic.gov.au/in-force/acts/water-act-1989/142
GWMWater has been approached by the Pyrenees Shire Council to investigate an extension of the Wimmera Mallee Pipeline to provide water to the farm gate in parts of the Pyrenees, Northern Grampians and Central Goldfields Shire’s where surface catchment dams have become unreliable.
A feasibility study completed in July 2023 looked at options to provide a dependable rural water supply, utilising existing water infrastructure and storages where possible and considering how to accommodate future growth. The introduction of a piped water supply could also provide significant environmental, social and economic benefits to the region.
Now that the project has been proven feasible, the project has proceeded to Business Case to confirm the economic case for the project and to identify funding partners and funding options for the project.
Subject to a favourable business case and government investment being obtained, a pipeline extension will reach into agricultural areas in the Southern Wimmera and Northeast Pyrenees area north, and north west of Avoca, where productivity and growth could be enhanced through a more secure water supply.
The feasibility study is for a raw (non-potable) supply only and does not include potable (drinking) water upgrades.
Fact Sheet - Southern Wimmera and Northeast Pyrenees Water Supply Feasibility Study
Newsletter #1 - Southern Wimmera and Northeast Pyrenees Water Supply - 21 September 2023
Newsletter #2 - Southern Wimmera and Northeast Pyrenees Water Supply - 4 December 2023
Newsletter #3 - Southern Wimmera and Northeast Pyrenees Water Supply - 1 May 2024
Newsletter #4 - Southern Wimmera and Northeast Pyrenees Water Supply - 6 August 2024
Expression of Interest
Expressions of Interest will be used to determine the project feasibility and progression to a full business case, costing and infrastructure planning.
Sewer fogging is a technique designed to identify leaks or unauthorised connections which may be allowing stormwater to pass into our sewer network. This increases the risk of spills from our sewer manholes, sewer pump stations and wastewater treatment plants during heavy wet weather events.
The fog will move through pipes and come up from the ground if there is a leak. The fog looks like smoke, but does not smell and is harmless to people, pets, food and materials
Please see Fact Sheet here which contains answers to frequently asked questions regarding sewer fogging.
If you require any further information about the works, please contact our friendly Customer Service Team on 1300 659 961 during business hours.