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Preparing Victorville environmental records...
Public environmental health records for water, air, land, infrastructure, incidents, and community indicators.
Toxin Scout summarizes public records from government and public datasets. Data can be delayed, incomplete, approximate, matched at non-parcel levels, or have accuracy problems as a result of this product's beta status, so verify important findings against the linked source records.
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Preparing Victorville environmental records...
Drinking water compliance, PFAS records, natural water body health, discharge permits, and water-quality monitoring records for Victorville.
Public water-system records for Victorville, CA from EPA SDWIS.
Victorville Water District
No active drinking-water issues detected in EPA SDWIS.
Reviewed: active/open records as of Q1 2026
Purchased or imported water record · Serves 135,983 people
Data from EPA SDWIS
PFAS screening separates EPA UCMR5 drinking-water monitoring from nearby DoD PFAS investigation-site records.
Drinking Water PFAS Monitoring
EPA UCMR5 samples public water systems. These results are separate from nearby PFAS cleanup or investigation-site records.
No PFAS detected in EPA UCMR5 drinking-water monitoring.
Reviewed: source records as of Q1 2026
Nearby PFAS Investigation Sites
DoD records are nearby site investigations, not Victorville drinking-water detections. Record names come from the source database and can be broad.
George Afb
Air Force · BRAC
Known detection in the DoD source record
Remedial investigation underway
Estimated investigation end date: 2032-09
No health-relevant impaired water body records surfaced within 10 km in EPA ATTAINS.
Data from EPA ATTAINS
NPDES permits regulate pollutant discharges into U.S. waterways. Facilities must report compliance quarterly.
Violation records
Last inspected: Dec 2025
Last inspected: Dec 2025
Last inspected: Dec 2025
Data from EPA ECHO
Reviewed: source records as of Jan 5005
Air quality data from EPA monitoring stations, facility emissions inventories, and area-level air-quality designations in this city.
San Bernardino County
Reported: Dec 2020
EPA national average is ~30 per million
According to EPA, a cancer risk of 30-in-1-million means that for every 1 million people continuously exposed to these air toxics over a 70-year lifetime, an estimated 30 may develop cancer from that exposure. This is in addition to cancer risk from all other causes.
Top local emission sources
Data from EPA AirToxScreen
EPA designates an area as nonattainment when air quality does not meet federal health-based standards (NAAQS) for a specific pollutant.
Los Angeles-San Bernardino Counties (West Mojave Desert): Ozone
NonattainmentSevere 158-Hour Ozone (2015 Standard)
Original designation: Aug 2018
Health effects (EPA): Respiratory inflammation, aggravation of asthma, reduced lung function (EPA)
San Bernardino County (part); excluding Searles Valley Planning area and South Coast Air Basin: PM10
NonattainmentModeratePM-10 (1987 Standard)
Original designation: Jan 1994
Health effects (EPA): Respiratory illness, aggravation of asthma (EPA)
Data from EPA Green Book
Crestline
Annual mean: 0.1 ppm · EPA standard: 0.07 ppm
Annual standard context: 105 exceedance days recorded in the reporting period
Reported: Mar 2026
Annual mean: 16.3 μg/m³ · EPA standard: 150 μg/m³
Reported: Mar 2026
Hesperia-Olive Street
Annual mean: 28.2 μg/m³ · EPA standard: 150 μg/m³
Reported: Mar 2026
Data from EPA AQS
Reviewed: source records as of Q4 2025
TRI releases are self-reported annual totals (calendar year 2024). Hover fugitive or stack for definitions.
Adelanto Plant 19
Reported: 2024
Calportland Oro Grande Plant
Reported: 2024
Cemex Construction Materials Pacific LLC
Reported: 2024
Contaminated sites, waste facilities, cleanup records, and industrial operations in this city.
Sites listed on the National Priorities List (NPL) where releases or threatened releases of hazardous substances may endanger public health or the environment, as designated under CERCLA.
Open data source: Search EPA ECHO· 110071102027
Reported: Nov 2021
Brownfield sites are properties where redevelopment is complicated by the presence of hazardous substances.
Open data source: Search EPA ECHO1 site with active cleanup or investigation status
15595 8th Street, Victorville
Reported: Feb 2026
Facilities with hazardous-waste handler records under RCRA in the reviewed 5-mile city-center search area. Active handler status is separate from air, water, or other ECHO compliance violations, which are shown in their own sections.
Active RCRA handler records in the reviewed city search area
No underground storage tank records with active/open release status surfaced within 2 miles.
Data from EPA UST Finder
Toxic Release Inventory data — chemicals disposed on-site at reporting facilities.
Adelanto Plant 19
Open data source: View EPA TRI facility recordFormerly Used Defense Sites are properties previously owned by, leased to, or otherwise possessed by the United States and under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of Defense. The FUDS program addresses environmental restoration at these properties.
Open data source: USACE FUDSReported: Jun 2026
Reported: Jun 2026
Sites regulated by the Mine Safety and Health Administration, including mines, sand and gravel operations, and portable crushers. Status and type are from the MSHA Mine Data Retrieval System. Records with active/intermittent status dates older than 5 years are shown as older records rather than current active sites.
No recently updated active or intermittent MSHA-regulated sites within 5 miles.
Reviewed: status dates within last 5 years
Data from MSHA
San Bernardino County, CA
Reported: Mar 2026
San Bernardino County is EPA Radon Zone 2 (moderate potential). EPA defines Zone 2 counties as having predicted average indoor screening levels between 2 pCi/L and 4 pCi/L.
Radon levels can vary from home to home, so EPA recommends testing the property to know its indoor level.
Flood-map status, chemical accident risk, nuclear facilities, pipeline incidents, and community health indicators in this city.
Risk Management Program facilities handle extremely hazardous substances (e.g., chlorine, ammonia, propane). EPA requires these facilities to plan for worst-case chemical releases.
No facility records with recent chemical accidents surfaced for this property within the last five years.
Data from EPA ECHO
Reviewed: 2000-present
Health outcomes from County Health Rankings. Values shown alongside state and national averages.
San Bernardino County, CaliforniaPop. 2,193,656
Reported: Mar 2026
Premature Death
Poor or Fair Health
Poor Physical Health Days
Poor Mental Health Days
Adult Smoking
Adult Obesity
Air Pollution - Particulate Matter
Drinking Water Violations
Diabetes Prevalence
Life Expectancy
| Indicator | County | State | National |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premature Death | 8,917 | 6,373 | 7,972 |
| Poor or Fair Health | 20.9% | 15.8% | 14.2% |
| Poor Physical Health Days | 4.1 | 3.1 | 3.3 |
| Poor Mental Health Days | 5.2 | 4.7 | 4.8 |
| Adult Smoking | 12.5% | 8.8% | 15.0% |
| Adult Obesity | 38.1% | 27.8% | 34.0% |
| Air Pollution - Particulate Matter | 15.6 | 7.1 | 7.3 |
| Drinking Water Violations | 1 | 1 | N/A |
| Diabetes Prevalence | 12.3% | 10.8% | 9.6% |
| Life Expectancy | 76.1 | 79.9 | 77.6 |