Boston Herald

Firefighte­rs praise cancer study

- By Amy Sokolow

A new report by a task force studying PFAS, or “forever chemicals” commonly found in nonstick cookware, some clothing and firefighte­r gear, is being praised by the firefighti­ng community.

“It was really shocking, both through testimony that we heard and coming to understand that PFAS is in all of the turnout gear that is used by our firefighte­rs, and with the increase of PFAS in gear, we’ll also see increases in cancer rates,” said state Rep. Kate Hogan, D-Stow, co-chair of the committee.

PFAS, or per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, are added to products to make them water-, greaseand stain-resistant, but they persist in the environmen­t and humans’ bodies, and can cause a myriad of health effects including kidney and liver disease, immune system suppressio­n, birth defects and cancer. PFAS have been detected in water systems throughout the state.

After nine public hearings over the past several months, the committee issued 30 recommenda­tions across eight broad strategy areas. Those eight areas include funding PFAS detection and remediatio­n, supporting environmen­tal justice communitie­s, phasing out PFAS in consumer products, expanding private well testing for PFAS and supporting firefighte­rs and local fire department­s.

Firefighte­rs from advocacy groups across the state testified throughout the hearing process for the task force, which Hogan called “really moving and incredibly informed.”

Fire Marshal for the state’s Department of Fire Services Peter Ostroskey served on the task force. “We know that we’re exposing firefighte­rs to carcinogen­s,” he said, adding that the firefighti­ng community is also concerned about its environmen­tal impacts.

“Large quantities of PFAS exist in our fire gear, and these forever chemicals have been linked to many cancers,” said Rich MacKinnon, Jr. President of the Profession­al Fire Fighters of Massachuse­tts.

“This report is a step in the right direction to keeping firefighte­rs healthy. We now look to the National Fire Protection Associatio­n to make the needed changes and ban PFAS from our gear.”

By one estimate, as many as 68% of firefighte­rs develop cancers, compared to 22% of the general population.

State Sen. Julian Cyr, D-Truro, also noted that Massachuse­tts would be “one of only a handful of other states,” including Maine and California, that would implement a consumer ban on PFAS products, which would be phased out by 2030, and labeled earlier than that as containing the chemical.

Hogan said legislator­s are pursuing “multiple legislativ­e opportunit­ies” through multiple bills to advance these recommenda­tions. She and Cyr noted that both the Department of Environmen­tal Protection and the Department of Public Health have received significan­t funding increases, which may bolster these efforts.

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