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Celebrating 210 Years!

Since 1816, the mission of The York Water Company has been clear: protect our community and deliver safe, reliable water. Founded to prevent fire and supply water to local industry in York (then Yorktowne), York Water now collects, treats, and distributes drinking water to customers across York, Adams, Franklin, and Lancaster Counties.

Thank you for being part of our story and for trusting “that good York water” for more than two centuries.

 

 

The 2025 Water Quality Consumer Confidence Reports are now available.

These extensive reports are published, in accordance with EPA and PA DEP guidelines annually for all our water systems and can be found here.

 

News and Press Releases

Lake Williams Dam Recognized with 2024 Regional Best Projects by Engineering News Record

The York Water Company’s Lake Williams Dam Rehabilitation recognized with an Award of Merit in the 2024 Regional Best Projects in Water/Environment by Engineering News Record (ENR)

The York Water Company Lake Williams Dam Rehabilitation project has been recognized with an Award of Merit in the 2024 Regional Best Projects in Water/Environment by Engineering News Record (ENR).

The Lake Williams Dam was built in 1912 to support fire protection, drinking water, and manufacturing needs. Its rehabilitation was necessitated by flood regulations requiring an exponential increase in the dam’s designed capacity. New flood regulations require the dam to pass a probable maximum flood of 107,000-plus cu ft per second – a huge hike in its original capacity.

York Water seized the chance to improve other elements, including the original spillway’s lack of underdrainage, the core wall’s foundation on undisturbed earth rather than bedrock, and an aging bridge and bascule gate system. A labyrinth spillway built on a roller-compacted concrete gravity section is founded on bedrock and designed to handle significantly higher discharge capacities than the original dam. Other enhancements included an outlet valve tower and advanced seepage-management features. These improvements respected the dam’s historical elements, including its original concrete core wall, which was excavated and confirmed to be intact and structurally sound.

The $40-million project was finished in 22 months, on budget and on schedule thanks to an incredible team.

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