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CWLP Celebrating Drinking Water Week

April 30, 2026

City Water, Light and Power is joining communities throughout North America in recognizing Drinking Water Week May 3-9, 2026. This is an opportunity to learn about how your drinking water is treated, tested and delivered, while recognizing the people responsible for keeping those systems running every day. This year, we are highlighting the value of our water, as well as the department’s history and some of the people behind the Water Division at CWLP. 

The City of Springfield has been a public water supply provider since 1868, and at that time was only the second water works provider in operation in Illinois. It was April 30, 1868 when raw, untreated water from the Sangamon River was first pumped from the City’s new water works pumping station on the north side of Springfield and on July 1 of that same year the water works began full-time operations and service.

Today, CWLP’s Water Division is responsible for producing and delivering water for a population of 150,000 encompassing several communities in and around Springfield. The CWLP water system includes Lake Springfield, the recently upgraded lakeside Water Purification Plant, three water storage tanks, and approximately 760 miles of water mains. The Division's primary mission is to ensure that all utility customers will have a safe and plentiful water supply in both the immediate and long-term future.

High Quality Water
City Water, Light and Power was recently awarded first place at the recent Illinois Section of the American Water Works Association District 3 taste test. Winning the central Illinois regional competition qualifies the utility to compete at the statewide event in April. The water samples were rated by a panel of judges based on the clarity, taste and odor of each.

In the our newly released, 2025 Water Quality Report, CWLP-produced drinking water met all USEPA and State of Illinois drinking water health standards and no violations of a contaminant level occurred.


Affordable Rates
Beyond the water rate increases implemented to ensure the health of the water fund and to meet regulatory compliance for lead service line replacements, rates remain among the lowest in the State of Illinois for Springfield customers. The CWLP Water Division has a positive outlook and continues be the best-in-class standard by which the rest of the state evaluates performance.
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Protecting Lake Springfield
Lake Springfield and its watershed. A man-made reservoir, the lake has 57 miles of shoreline and is the largest municipally-owned lake in Illinois. It's watershed is 265-square miles and is comprised of drainage areas from Lick and Sugar Creeks and their tributaries and runoff water comes from as far west as Waverly and as far south as Virden. Given the agricultural nature of the watershed, the lake is very much influenced by the soils, land uses, and human activity occurring within the watershed.

For the past 40 years, CWLP and a broad coalition of land partners and local agencies, have invested millions of dollars and been working to improve and protect Lake Springfield and its watershed. Over the years Lake Springfield has undergone extensive monitoring and restoration, including the dredging of part of the upper reaches of the lake, bathymetric and land surveys, and watershed management projects all to help protect the source. Over $9 million has been spent in agricultural Best Management Practices (BMPs) and shoreline work since 1982.

CWLP’s Land & Water Resources Division, the driver of these efforts, continues to partner with the USDA’s National Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) office, the Sangamon County Soil and Water Conservation District and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) to implement watershed management and soil conversation practice through IEPA 319 grants, NRCS Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) grants and CWLP Water Division funding.

Over the next two years, CWLP’s Land & Water Resources Division plans to focus on more BMPs and structural improvements, including a new initiative with The Wetlands Initiative to convert two farmland areas back to wetland to trap nutrients and sediment with RCPP funding. In addition, another 2,500 feet of shoreline stabilization is planned, along with supporting matches to new city sewer installations around the lake along Island View Lane , N. Cottonhill and Bayridge Lane. Beyond these projects the next major work for Lake Springfield and its Water Division, lies in the near years ahead for dredging the basin as last accomplished 1987 to 1989 when over 652 million gallons of capacity was restored.

For its development and implementation of exemplary source water protection programs, in April 2025 CWLP was presented the Illinois Section of American Water Works Association’s 2025 Source Water Protection Award along with the Water Ambassador Award for outreach and education efforts.


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 (Pictured L to R: Melissa Olenick, ISAWWA Chair; Quentin Jordan, CWLP; Mary McGrath, CWLP; Dan Brill, CWLP; Todd LaFountain, CWLP; Heather Collins, AWWA Incoming President. Photo Credit: Timmy Samuel/Starbelly Studios) 

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