Montana Department of Health and Environmental Sciences, Water Quality Bureau records
Scope and Contents
This collection is a subgroup (Division) of the Montana Department of Environmental Quality records, RS 494. After the Department of Environmental Quality was formed in 1995, following the split from the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences (which became the Department of Public Health and Human Services) the Water Quality Bureau became the Water Quality Division. Please see the primary finding aid for more Montana Department of Environmental Quality records. These records of the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences, Water Quality Bureau (1989-1994) consist of subject files related to water planning projects for various subdivisions in Montana.
This collection consists of subject files related to water planning projects for various subdivisions in Montana. Most prominently represented are Flathead, Gallatin, and Lewis and Clark Counties.
Dates
- Creation: 1989-1994
Language of Materials
English
Conditions Governing Use
The Montana Historical Society is the owner of the materials in the Research Library and makes available reproductions for research, publication, and other uses. Written permission must be obtained from the Research Library before any reproduction use. The Society does not necessarily hold copyright to all of the materials in the collections. In some cases, permission for use may require seeking additional authorization from the copyright owners.
Biographical / Historical
As part of that reorganization, the Division of Sanitary Engineering and the Division of Food and Drug were combined to create a new Division of Environmental Sanitation. C. W. Brinck was appointed director of the new division on May 1, 1951. The division was divided into three sections: water, sewage, and general sanitation. The Water Section was in charge of water supplies--both public and private--swimming pools, well drilling for public water supplies, and review of plans for water works, swimming pools, school buildings, and other public buildings. The Sewage Section was in charge of sewage disposal, stream pollution abatement, plan review, sewage plant systems, cesspool and septic tank cleaning, and garbage disposal. The General Sanitation Section was itself divided into two areas run by the sanitarian and by the chemist. Sanitary inspection services included inspections of restaurants, meat markets, food manufacturing, soft drink/ ice cream parlors, tourist camps, locker plants, camp sanitation, and mattress factories. In addition, the sanitarian was responsible for insect and rodent control. The chemist was in charge of the laboratory, which conducted analyzes of water, sewage, soft drinks, meats, bakery products, canned goods, fruits for spray residue, insecticides and other poisons, drugs, and liquors.
In 1967 the Legislative Assembly created the State Department of Health. The State Board of Health continued in an advisory capacity, but the day-to-day administration of the state laws regarded public health and related matters were relegated to the new department. The State Board of Health became the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences in 1971 with the passage of Governor Anderson’s Executive Reorganization Order 9-71. In 1991, though it remained a part of the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences, the role of the Environmental Sciences Division was considerably expanded to include: Natural Resource Damage Assessment, a Petroleum Tank Release Compensation Board, a Superfund Section, and an Underground Storage Tanks Section.
The Environmental Sciences Division eventually became its own separate department, renamed the Department of Environmental Quality, in 1995, comprised of the following divisions: Director’s Office, Air Quality, Centralized Services, Energy, Environmental Remediation, Reclamation, Waste Management, and Water Quality.
The mission of the Water Quality Bureau is to assure that water quality is maintained and improved so that state waters can support all their beneficial uses. The goal being to work with the public, agencies, and other interests to evaluate, maintain, and improve the quality of state waters.
Extent
0.8 linear feet
Abstract
This collection is a subgroup (Division) of the Montana Department of Environmental Quality records, RS 494. After the Department of Environmental Quality was formed in 1995, following the split from the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences (which became the Department of Public Health and Human Services) the Water Quality Bureau became the Water Quality Division. Please see the primary finding aid for more Montana Department of Environmental Quality records. These records of the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences, Water Quality Bureau (1989-1994) consist of subject files related to water planning projects for various subdivisions in Montana.
Arrangement
This collection is arranged by series.
Physical Location
43:4-4
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Acquisition information available upon request
Processing Information
In 2024, the various collections of the Montana Department of Environmental Quality were integrated under one collection identifier, RS 494, in order to help facilitate access, reduce redundancy in the MTHS catalog, and to follow best archival practices.
Collections from Montana Department of Environmental Quality's various Divisions and Bureaus that were previously treated as separate entities are now integrated into this collection, RS 494. Rather than reprocessing over 150 linear feet of DEQ materials, MTHS staff decided to keep the past arrangement of those collections/finding aids, and provide access to them via links through the central finding aid. This decision has allowed the MTHS archival staff to maintain intellectual control over the collection, while removing the need to reprocess it. It also keeps State Agency finding aids at manageable sizes. Please read the scope and content note carefully to determine if this subgroup/sub-subgroup pertains to your research needs.
- Title
- Guide to the Montana Department of Health and Environmental Sciences, Water Quality Bureau records, 1989-1994
- Author
- Finding aid prepared by Rachel Lilley
- Date
- 2012
- Description rules
- Finding Aid Based On Dacs ( Describing Archives: A Content Standard, 2nd Edition)
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English.
- Sponsor
- Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC)
Repository Details
Part of the Montana Historical Society, Research Center Archives Repository
225 North Roberts
PO Box 201201
Helena MT 59620-1201 United States
406-444-2681
406-444-2696 (Fax)
mhslibrary@mt.gov