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Drinking water must be regularly tested for legionella. Not only public facilities are affected, but also landlords and landladies under certain conditions.
According to the Drinking Water Ordinance (TrinkwV), operators of a mobile water supply system, a building water supply system or a temporary water supply system must have the drinking water tested for legionella at several representative sampling points if it is supplied as part of a commercial or public activity, if
In the case of rentals, homeowners, landlords or communities of owners (possibly represented by a property management company) are deemed to be the operators of the water supply system.
In the case of commercial letting, the inspection must be carried out at least once every three years, and in the case of drinking water supply as part of a public activity, at least once a year. If no objections have been found during the annual inspections in three consecutive years, the public health department can also set longer inspection intervals of up to three years, provided that the system and mode of operation
The tests must be carried out in accordance with § 31 of the Drinking Water Ordinance (TrinkwV) and without being initiated by the public health department. The inspection intervals in accordance with § 31 Para. 2 TrinkwV apply:
In the case of newly commissioned water supply systems, the first test must be carried out within three to twelve months of commissioning in accordance with Section 31 (4) TrinkwV.
A so-called technical measure value (TMW, value for triggering measures) of 100 CFU (colony-forming units) per 100 ml applies to contamination with legionella. When testing in accordance with Section 31 Para. 1, the testing body must immediately inform the operator of a water supply system if the TMW is reached in accordance with Section 39 Para. 4 No. 2 TrinkwV. In addition, this situation must be reported immediately to the responsible health authority in accordance with Section 53 (1) TrinkwV.
Furthermore, the operator of the water supply system (owner, property management) bears primary responsibility for the measures required under the Drinking Water Ordinance when the TMW is reached:
In the case of extremely high legionella levels (over 10,000 CFU/100 ml), the showers may no longer be used until the problem has been eliminated. Use of the showers during this period is only possible if bacteria-proof filters are installed.
Operators of evaporative cooling systems, cooling towers and wet separators are obliged, among other things, to apply the state of the art during construction and operation and to implement organizational measures.
The operator must notify the public health department of the construction, commissioning, decommissioning, structural and operational changes or the transfer of ownership or right of use of the water supply system to another person.