Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. seeks to ease toxin test at lab

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SANTA FE, N.M. — The U.S. Energy Department wants to switch to less-stringent testing for detecting cancer-causing chemicals at and around one of its premier nuclear weapons laboratori­es despite concerns from environmen­talists and New Mexico regulators.

The federal agency is using New Mexico’s three-year review of surface water rules to push for a test at Los Alamos National Laboratory — the birthplace of the atomic bomb — that’s more limited in detecting polychlori­nated biphenyls, or PCBs, the Santa Fe New Mexican reported. Medical research has shown the chemicals can cause cancer, impair children’s brain developmen­t, hurt reproducti­ve systems and increase the chance of heart and liver diseases.

The Energy Department asserts that its testing would be sufficient and that the current method required by the state goes far beyond what’s necessary.

Parties in the dispute have submitted written arguments and testified at hearings held by the state Environmen­tal Improvemen­t Board as part of its review of surface-water regulation­s done every three years.

Rachel Conn, project director for the Taos-based Amigos Bravos water conservati­on organizati­on, bashed the proposed testing change as another attempt by the Energy Department to cut corners on safeguardi­ng public health.

“It’s a shame that our taxpayer money is being used to lower the bar for protection­s for New Mexico waters and weaken our water quality standards,” she said.

Los Alamos National Laboratory has more than 130 miles of streams in and around its site, covering 36 square miles. How often it monitors for pollution can range from hourly to yearly and in some cases every five years.

In New Mexico, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency issues permits for discharges and stormwater runoff, and the state checks whether the water quality meets its standards.

John Toll, an Energy Department consultant, testified that the state’s required testing method was never officially approved by the EPA, so New Mexico must use the EPAbacked test — what energy officials are proposing.

He also said the state, in turn, cannot require testing that detects amounts of PCBs lower than the minimum levels described in the federal guidelines.

Shelly Lemon, the state Environmen­t Department’s Surface Water Quality Bureau chief, argued that states can adopt regulation­s that are more stringent than federal rules. Specifical­ly, she wrote that state law doesn’t bar agencies from adopting standards that are stricter than the Clean Water Act.

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