Florida · drinking water · SDWIS through latest publish

Horizon's End Camp Resort Water Quality — Davenport, Florida

PWSID FL3532496 · GroundwaterPrivate

130 people served. No health-based SDWIS violations recorded in the past 5 years.

ALL SDWIS VIOLATIONS · 20212026 (annual count)
Bar chart of annual values from 2021 to 2026, in violations. Most recent year (2026): 0 violations.0 violations'21'22'23'24'25'260 violations
Anomaly engine

Active signals

No SDWIS health-based or unresolved violations on the record. Contaminant detail and equity context below.

Violation history

What's On The SDWIS Record

Health-based violations exceed an MCL or treatment-technique standard. Monitoring violations are reporting failures with no measured exceedance — they tell you the system isn't fully transparent, not that the water is unsafe today.

No SDWIS violations recorded in the analysis window.

Equity context · ACS 2018-2022 · USEPA-clone EJ disparity

Who Drinks This Water

Davenport, Florida (Census place; block-group disparity scores aggregated by centroid containment): a service population of 10,246. Local disparity score for pm2.5 (fine particulate) sits near the reference (109). Why we surface this →

POPULATION SHARE
17.9%

Low-income

POPULATION SHARE
76.8%

People of color

POPULATION SHARE
4.9%

Under age 5

POPULATION SHARE
10.2%

Over age 64

NATIONAL PERCENTILE · vs all US block groups (population-weighted; ranked against the national EJScreen indicator distribution)

  • PM2.5 (fine particulate)Health riskFine inhalable particles 2.5 micrometers or smaller. They travel deep into the lungs and into the bloodstream — linked to asthma, heart disease, stroke, and premature death.60above the national median
  • OzoneHealth riskGround-level ozone (smog) inflames the airways. Even short exposures trigger asthma attacks and worsen chronic lung and heart disease.40below the national median
  • Nitrogen dioxide (NO₂)Health riskA tailpipe and combustion gas. Concentrates near busy roads and industrial sites; raises risk of airway inflammation, asthma, and lower respiratory infections in children.43near the national median
  • Diesel particulateHealth riskSoot from diesel engines (trucks, trains, ports, construction). EPA classifies it as a likely human carcinogen and a major driver of childhood asthma near freight corridors.47near the national median
  • Toxic releases (RSEI)Health riskEPA's Risk-Screening Environmental Indicators score — weights TRI chemical releases by toxicity, where they go, and how many people are nearby. Higher means greater modeled cancer and chronic-health risk.24below the national median
  • Traffic proximityHealth riskPopulation-weighted distance to high-volume roads. Living close to heavy traffic raises exposure to PM2.5, NO₂, and diesel exhaust — and the cardiovascular and asthma risks that follow.22below the national median
  • Lead-paint risk (pre-1960 housing)Health riskShare of housing built before 1960, when lead-based paint was common. Dust from deteriorating paint is the leading cause of childhood lead poisoning, which permanently impairs cognitive development.17below the national median
  • Superfund site proximityHealth riskPopulation-weighted distance to NPL Superfund sites — the most contaminated waste sites in the country. Nearby groundwater, soil, and air can carry industrial solvents, metals, and other long-lived contaminants.56near the national median
  • RMP-facility proximityHealth riskDistance to facilities holding chemicals at quantities large enough to require an EPA Risk Management Plan (refineries, fertilizer plants, etc.). These pose acute exposure risk during accidental releases.58near the national median
  • Hazardous-waste site proximityHealth riskDistance to RCRA hazardous-waste handlers (treatment, storage, disposal facilities). Indicates potential exposure to industrial chemicals in air, soil, and groundwater.14below the national median
  • Underground storage tanksHealth riskDensity of underground tanks (gasoline, heating oil, industrial fluids). Leaking tanks are a leading source of benzene and other volatile organic compounds in groundwater drinking-water supplies.64above the national median
  • NPDES wastewater proximityHealth riskDistance to permitted industrial wastewater dischargers. Closer proximity raises exposure to pollutants released into surface waters used for fishing, recreation, and downstream drinking-water intakes.8below the national median
  • Drinking-water non-complianceHealth riskEPA score for public water systems with health-based Safe Drinking Water Act violations. Higher means more residents on systems that recently exceeded safe limits for contaminants like lead, arsenic, or nitrate.91in the highest 10% nationally
EJ disparity scores · service-area block groups (100 = national reference; higher = greater disparate burden)
IndicatorDisparity scoreReading
PM2.5 (fine particulate)109near the reference
Ozone11well below the reference
Nitrogen dioxide (NO₂)75below the reference
Diesel particulate84below the reference
Toxic releases (RSEI)41well below the reference
Traffic proximity43well below the reference
Lead-paint risk (pre-1960 housing)0well below the reference
Superfund site proximity0well below the reference
RMP-facility proximity99near the reference
Hazardous-waste site proximity0well below the reference
Underground storage tanks105near the reference
NPDES wastewater proximity0well below the reference
Drinking-water non-compliance154well above the reference burden

Source: Census ACS 2018-2022 (5-year) + USEPA-clone EJ blockgroup stats (raw indicators + EJ disparity mirror).

Source. EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System · retrieved 2026-05-07. Reporting period 2021-01-012026-05-07.

What this is not. SDWIS records compliance against federal MCLs — not a direct readout of tap-water concentrations. Active health-based violations are not the same as a current crisis; we link to the EPA record so you can verify return-to-compliance status before forming a conclusion.