Dayton Daily News

New lab takes space in former country daycare

- By Sydney Dawes Staff Writer Contact this reporter at Sydney.Dawes@coxinc.com.

A $6 million Montgomery County Environmen­tal Services laboratory has moved into a space that was formerly a child daycare connected to the Montgomery County administra­tive building in downtown Dayton.

The laboratory serves more than 80,000 homes and busi- nesses in Montgomery County by analyzing samples from the county’s water distribu- tion system and treated water from its wastewater treatment plants.

The county purchases its water from Dayton’s public water system. The Montgom- ery County Environmen­tal Services distributi­on system provides water to Kettering, Centervill­e and Riverside, as well as portions of central and northern Montgomery County.

“Continual monitoring of the water quality in a distributi­on system is critical to the wellbeing of our community,” said Montgomery County Environmen­tal Services manager Jim Davis. “Our team here takes this role very seriously. We drink this water, too.”

Montgomery County leaders celebrated the opening of the new laboratory, which employs six people, at a rib- bon-cutting ceremony on Monday afternoon.

“The environmen­tal research and innovation really makes a difference, and it is a reaffirmat­ion of our commit- ment to excellence and our willingnes­s to embrace change in support of shared goals,” said Montgomery County commission president Deb- bie Lieberman.

The Montgomery County commission approved $6 mil- lion in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds for the project, which kicked off in 2022.

In 2023, staff analyzed more than 11,000 samples for approximat­ely 35,000 tests, according to Environ- mental Services.

Analysts who work in the county’s sampling lab began moving from their old location on Dryden Road in Moraine last year. Staff test for lead, copper, organics, bacteria and other contaminan­ts.

The county’s water service department is regulated by the Ohio Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA). The lab has submitted 339 results for evaluation over the past three years with all being scored as “acceptable” by the state. Over the past 10 years, the acceptance rate was 99.2%, according to Environmen­tal Services.

The decision to move the laboratory came at a time where the commission was updating other aging infrastruc­ture within Environmen­tal Services and other department­s.

The funding went toward updating the former daycare and updating equipment throughout the laboratory. The laboratory features state-of-the art equipment and design choices that increase safety.

“Staff have the ability to actually see each other with a modern, open-concept floor plan. It’s the little things that make such a big difference,” said Environmen­tal Services director Matt Hilliard.

 ?? JIM NOELKER / STAFF ?? Montgomery County Environmen­tal Services opened a new lab in the basement of the parking garage adjacent to the administra­tion building.
JIM NOELKER / STAFF Montgomery County Environmen­tal Services opened a new lab in the basement of the parking garage adjacent to the administra­tion building.

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