Imperial Valley Press

Years of work ahead to study chemical pollution at NASA site

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RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Understand­ing the extent of contaminat­ion at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility from dangerous industrial chemicals that also made their way into the drinking water for the nearby island town of Chincoteag­ue will take years, officials said this week.

Meanwhile, the popular tourist town on Virginia’s Eastern Shore is moving ahead with plans to find a new supply for its drinking water, which has to be piped in from the mainland. It recently spent a sizeable amount of its relatively small budget to buy land for new wells it feels confident will be free of contaminat­ion from the chemicals, per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, which are emerging as a problem nationwide.

Although NASA has been providing supplement­al drinking water since the chemicals were first detected over a year ago, town manager Jim West said he sees it as a risk for both NASA and Chincoteag­ue not to make a change.

“If there’s contaminan­ts, isn’t the wiser thing to get out of the field of contaminan­ts? We want to relocate somewhere we think we will be safe,” he said.

The man-made chemicals referred to as PFAS were once used in a wide variety of products, including protective coatings like Teflon.

NASA used firefighti­ng foam containing PFAS at Wallops. PFAS, which is persistent in both the environmen­t and the human body, is increasing­ly turning up in water systems across the country. Scott Pruitt called the issue a “national priority” before resigning as Environmen­tal Protection Agency administra­tor this year.

Once PFAS was detected on Wallops property, where Chincoteag­ue has seven wells, NASA began collaborat­ing with the town on public outreach and further testing.

The town’s wells where PFAS was detected were taken offline, and Wallops began providing extra water. PFAS levels in the town’s finished drinking water never exceeded health advisory limits set by the EPA, and NASA says the water has been PFAS-free for more than a year.

Now NASA is moving onto a long-term strategy to understand the full extent of the problem and clean it up. The agency recently submitted a site investigat­ion plan for review by federal and state officials, officials told The Associated Press this week. A NASA spokesman declined to make a copy of the work plan available, saying it was still in draft form and under review.

The plan calls for sampling soil and groundwate­r and using monitoring wells to try to understand exactly where the PFAS is and how it’s moving in those areas, said TJ Meyer, associate chief of the medical and environmen­tal management division at NASA Wallops.

After that data is available, NASA will conduct a risk assessment and evaluate remedial options, Meyer said.

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