Dillon Valley District
Water & Sewer Services
Dillon Valley District
The Dillon Valley District provides drinking water to the Dillon Valley area. Your water is treated utilizing multiple steps to remove and disinfect any bacteria that meets the strict State and Federal drinking water standards ensuring your water is safe for consumption. Our staff continuously monitors the water supply to serve our customers in the Dillon Valley community.
Please use this site as your source for information about the District and news about your water and sewer services in Dillon Valley, Colorado.
NOTICE: The regular scheduled board meeting for OCTOBER 17th has been rescheduled to a special meeting on OCTOBER 24TH. Sorry for any inconvenience this may have caused. Thank you.
Featured Public Notice:
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR CERTIFICATION OF DELIQUENT ACCOUNTS
DILLON VALLEY DISTRICT
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is given that the Dillon Valley District Board of Directors will hold a public hearing to receive comments regarding the certification of delinquent accounts to the Summit County Treasurer for collection with property taxes at the regular Board meeting on November 21st, 2024, at 4:00 p.m.
DILLON VALLEY DISTRICT
/s/ Angelique Justich
By: Angelique Justich
District Administrator
Operations
District Administrator
Billing & General Questions
Phone: (970) 306-7233
Mailing Address:
Dillon Valley District
PO Box 3428
Dillon, CO 80435-3428
Emergency Service
For water system emergencies such as water leaks or water supply issues, or for sewer system issues, please call Water Solutions Inc.
Conservation
and statistics
Please Remember
Please help out the our water systems
by abiding to some general rules.
Don't Flush These Items
Please do not flush paper towels or flushable baby wipes down the sewer system as they do not break down and can create a serious problem with backups. Please just throw these in the garbage.
The Story of Water
The Egyptians were the first people to record methods for treating water. These records date back more than 1,500 years to 400 A.D. They indicate that the most common ways of cleaning water were by boiling it over a fire, heating it in the sun, or by dipping a heated piece of iron into it.