Oaktree
Super Member
Depends. Doesn't have to be "city" water, but it's a municipal water system, sometimes just a township, or small area. Aquifer contamination by either faulty septics systems or industrial contamination are quite common across America. Many times around here, developers will build housing developments outside of city limits, and run city water to them, with the stipulation that they won't fight annexation attempts in the future. Things like that.
In a way I wish I had access to "city" water at my last house. I don't think it was contaminated (never had it tested, but no ill results in 30 years living there), but it sometimes had kind of a swampy taste to it, and would stain the toilet, shower, etc. Mine was a shallow well, and believe it or not I considered myself lucky...neighbors with drilled wells had worse water than me!
Apologies for threadjacking (and a potentially stupid question), but when you say "annexation" I presume you mean a city or town pushing its limits outward into unincorporated area (or perhaps swallowing adjacent towns)? What would be the advantages/disadvantages to being subject to this, and do residents have any say in the matter?
Not something you see around here in modern times...what little unincorporated area exists is generally uninhabitable. I think it did happen in the 19th century and before...lots of neighborhoods that were once separate entities.