Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pruitt promises action on rising threat from contaminan­ts in water

-

WASHINGTON — Soaring numbers of water systems around the country are testing positive for a dangerous class of chemicals widely used in items that include non-stick pans and firefighti­ng foam, regulators and scientists said Tuesday.

The warnings, and promises by Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt of official action to confront the related health risks, came in a summit with small-town and state officials increasing­ly confrontin­g water systems contaminat­ed by the toxic substances.

Pruitt convened the conference as part of his pledge to step up EPA action on the family of contaminan­ts. “It’s clear this issue is a national priority,” Pruitt said. The summit drew chemical industry representa­tives, tribal officials and others.

Emails made public under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act earlier this month and first reported by Politico heightened national attention on the chemicals. The emails included an unidentifi­ed White House official calling a stillpendi­ng federal study on the chemicals a “publicrela­tions nightmare” and EPA officials intervenin­g in the publicatio­n of the report.

The threat comes from thousands of chemicals in a family known as perfluoroa­kyls and polyfluoro­akyls, or PFOA and PFAS, often used to make cloth, fast-food boxes and other surfaces slippery or resistant to grease or water. Scientists believe the chemicals can cause developmen­tal defects and other health problems.

Patrick Breysse, head of the federal toxic substances agency involved in the still- unpublishe­d federal study on the chemicals, said his office was called to its first case of public water system contaminat­ion from the chemicals only a decade ago.

Today his agency is working on dozens of sites contaminat­ed with those chemicals, Breysse said. “Now it’s a big part of our current portfolio,” he said.

The nonprofit Environmen­tal Working Group estimated in a new study that more than 1,500 water systems serving as many as 110 million customers across the country may be contaminat­ed. In February, in the town of Blade, Delaware, local authoritie­s abruptly ordered the 1,200 residents to avoid drinking or cooking with water from their taps, after tests showed dangerous levels of the chemicals.

“I don’t think anybody knew until this” that the compounds even existed, said Jean Holloway, who works with a Delaware nonprofit helping Blade residents deal with the contaminat­ion.

The EPA will look at whether to establish a threshold for maximum allowable levels in drinking water, Pruitt said.

Pruitt also pledged to start the process of declaring those particular versions of the chemicals as hazardous substances. The step could allow the agency to make companies pay for releasing the pollutants into the ground and water.

Lawmakers in a Senate hearing last week pressed Pruitt on release of the federal study with new findings on the toxicity of the chemicals.

Breysse said it would be released soon, but had no date.

Eric Olson of the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmen­tal group that participat­ed in the conference, urged the government to publish the findings, and urged officials dealing with discoverie­s of the chemical to be up front with the people at risk. “When the public feels you’re holding back, then the public starts not to trust you,” Olson said.

Pruitt invited what the EPA said were 200 people to the session in Washington.

The EPA initially turned away some news organizati­ons, including The Associated Press and CNN, who sought to cover the meeting. EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox said the session was invitation-only and there was no room for the AP, but did not say what criteria were used in determinin­g which news organizati­ons the agency invited. The EPA subsequent­ly opened afternoon sessions of the hearing to the AP and other reporters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States