{"id":424,"date":"2026-06-29T07:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-06-29T07:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/rpmwes.com\/blog\/?p=424"},"modified":"2026-07-03T02:48:00","modified_gmt":"2026-07-03T02:48:00","slug":"legionella-water-management-plan","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rpmwes.com\/blog\/legionella-water-management-plan\/","title":{"rendered":"What Is a Legionella Water Management Plan?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Quick Answer<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>A Legionella water management plan is a documented program that identifies where Legionella bacteria could grow in your building&#8217;s water systems \u2014 cooling towers, hot water systems, decorative fountains \u2014 and defines the control measures, monitoring, and corrective actions that prevent it. Most plans follow ASHRAE Standard 188, the framework referenced by the CDC and most regulators. For cooling towers, the plan covers biocide treatment, temperature management, cleaning and disinfection schedules, and drift eliminator maintenance. Plans are legally required for cooling towers in New York and a growing list of jurisdictions, and CMS requires them in all healthcare facilities. Expect a team-based program documented in writing, validated with periodic testing, and reviewed at least annually.<\/p>\n<p>If your building has a cooling tower, you need a Legionella water management plan \u2014 not just because it&#8217;s increasingly required by law, but because Legionella bacteria pose a genuine health risk that responsible building management must address. The good news is that an effective water management plan complements your water efficiency and sewer credit programs rather than competing with them.<\/p>\n<h2>What Legionella Is and Why Cooling Towers Matter<\/h2>\n<p>Legionella is a type of bacteria that causes Legionnaires&#8217; disease, a severe form of pneumonia that can be fatal, particularly in elderly or immunocompromised individuals. Cooling towers are one of the most common sources of Legionella outbreaks because they create ideal growth conditions: warm water (typically 85 to 95 degrees Fahrenheit in the basin), a large surface area for biofilm formation, and a mechanism (drift) for dispersing water droplets containing bacteria into the surrounding air.<\/p>\n<p>The <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cdc.gov\/legionella\/wmp\/index.html\">CDC&#8217;s Legionella water management guidance<\/a> identifies cooling towers as a critical control point in any building water management program. Major outbreaks in New York City, Atlanta, and other cities have led to increased regulatory attention and, in many jurisdictions, mandatory water management plans.<\/p>\n<h2>What a Water Management Plan Includes<\/h2>\n<p>ASHRAE Standard 188 provides the framework that most jurisdictions reference for Legionella water management plans. A compliant plan includes a description of the building&#8217;s water systems, including all cooling towers, hot water systems, decorative fountains, and other potential Legionella sources. It identifies control points where conditions favor bacterial growth and documents control measures \u2014 temperature targets, chemical treatment protocols, and monitoring procedures \u2014 for each risk point.<\/p>\n<p>For cooling towers specifically, the plan must address water treatment chemistry (biocide selection and dosing schedules), temperature management, cleaning and disinfection schedules, drift eliminator maintenance, and monitoring procedures that verify the control measures are working. The plan also specifies who is responsible for each action, how often inspections occur, and what corrective actions to take when monitoring reveals a problem.<\/p>\n<h2>How It Connects to Water Monitoring<\/h2>\n<p>Here&#8217;s where Legionella compliance and water management efficiency converge. The monitoring infrastructure required for a Legionella water management plan \u2014 regular water quality testing, temperature tracking, chemical residual monitoring \u2014 overlaps significantly with the monitoring needed for <a href=\"https:\/\/rpmwes.com\/blog\/cycles-of-concentration-explained\/\">optimizing cycles of concentration<\/a> and maintaining efficient tower operation.<\/p>\n<p>A <a href=\"https:\/\/rpmwes.com\/blog\/how-rpm-water-monitoring-works\/\">real-time water monitoring system<\/a> that tracks flow rates, temperatures, and chemical parameters serves double duty: it supports your sewer credit documentation while simultaneously providing the continuous monitoring data that a strong Legionella water management plan requires. The <a href=\"https:\/\/www.energy.gov\/eere\/femp\/best-management-practice-10-cooling-tower-management\">Department of Energy&#8217;s cooling tower guidance<\/a> explicitly connects water quality monitoring with both operational efficiency and health safety compliance.<\/p>\n<h2>Regulatory Landscape<\/h2>\n<p>As of 2025, New York City, New York State, and several other jurisdictions require cooling tower registration and mandatory water management plans. Many other states and cities are moving in the same direction. Even where it&#8217;s not yet legally mandated, ASHRAE 188 compliance is increasingly expected as a standard of care \u2014 meaning building owners who don&#8217;t have a plan may face liability exposure if an outbreak occurs.<\/p>\n<p>CMS (the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) requires Legionella water management plans for all healthcare facilities \u2014 hospitals, nursing homes, and similar buildings \u2014 as a condition of Medicare participation. If your building falls into this category, the plan isn&#8217;t optional regardless of local regulations.<\/p>\n<h2>How to Build a Plan: A Practical Sequence<\/h2>\n<p>ASHRAE 188 lays out a sequence most buildings can follow directly. Start by assembling a water management team \u2014 typically the facility manager, your water treatment vendor, a representative of building ownership, and, in healthcare settings, infection control staff. Next, map your building water systems with a flow diagram showing where water enters, how it moves, and every point where it is stored, heated, cooled, or aerosolized.<\/p>\n<p>Then identify control points and set control limits \u2014 measurable values such as basin temperature ranges, biocide residual levels, or free chlorine concentrations. For each control point, document how often you monitor, who performs the check, and what corrective action follows when a reading falls outside its limit. Finally, establish verification (confirming the plan is being followed) and validation (periodic Legionella testing confirming the plan actually works). The <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cdc.gov\/control-legionella\/php\/toolkit\/wmp-toolkit.html\">CDC&#8217;s water management program toolkit<\/a> walks through each of these steps with worksheets and worked examples.<\/p>\n<h2>What a Plan Costs to Build and Run<\/h2>\n<p>For a typical commercial building with one or two cooling towers, having a qualified consultant develop an ASHRAE 188 plan generally runs $2,000 to $7,500, depending on the number of water systems and the complexity of the site. Routine Legionella culture testing costs roughly $50 to $150 per sample, so quarterly sampling of a cooling tower system might add $500 to $2,000 per year, plus staff time for temperature checks and log-keeping.<\/p>\n<p>Those numbers are small against the alternative. A confirmed outbreak traced to a cooling tower can trigger emergency disinfection, mandatory shutdowns, litigation, and regulatory penalties that run well into six or seven figures. Buildings that already collect continuous water quality data have a head start: much of the monitoring a plan requires can fold into measurements you are already taking.<\/p>\n<p>Curious what continuous visibility looks like in practice? See how <a href=\"https:\/\/rpmwes.com\/towermonitoring.html\">RPM&#8217;s 24\/7 cooling tower monitoring<\/a> works.<\/p>\n<div class=\"wp-block-group has-background\" style=\"border-top-color:#2980b9;border-top-width:3px;background-color:#d6eaf8;padding:1.5em\">\n<div class=\"wp-block-group__inner-container\">\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Ready to Find Out What You Could Save?<\/h3>\n<p>RPM Water Equity Solutions helps commercial facilities recover money lost to sewer billing assumptions. If your building has cooling towers, you may be paying sewer charges on water that never reaches the sewer system.<\/p>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/rpmwes.com\/#contact\">Request your free assessment today<\/a><\/strong> and find out how much you could recover.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Protection and Efficiency Together<\/h2>\n<p>A Legionella water management plan isn&#8217;t just a regulatory checkbox \u2014 it&#8217;s a framework for maintaining a healthy, well-managed cooling tower system. The monitoring, maintenance, and documentation practices it requires make your tower run more efficiently, reduce water waste, and support your <a href=\"https:\/\/rpmwes.com\/blog\/what-is-a-sewer-credit\/\">sewer credit applications<\/a>. If you haven&#8217;t developed a plan yet, start now \u2014 your occupants&#8217; health, your regulatory compliance, and your operational efficiency all benefit from the same disciplined approach to water management.<\/p>\n<p><script type=\"application\/ld+json\">{\"@context\": \"https:\/\/schema.org\", \"@type\": \"BlogPosting\", \"headline\": \"What Is a Legionella Water Management Plan?\", \"description\": \"A Legionella water management plan protects building occupants and keeps your cooling tower compliant. 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