Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden to restrict cancer-causing ‘forever chemicals’

- By Lisa Friedman

WASHINGTON — For the first time, the federal government will require utilities to remove from drinking water two toxic chemicals found in everything from waterproof clothing to dental floss and even toilet paper, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency announced Tuesday.

Michael Regan, the administra­tor of the EPA, said the government intends to require near-zero levels of perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, part of a class of chemicals known as known as PFAS. Exposure to the chemicals has been linked to cancer, liver damage, fertility and thyroid problems, asthma and other health effects.

“This is very significan­t,”

Regan said in an interview. “This is the first time in U.S. history that we’ve set enforceabl­e limits for PFAS pollution.”

The synthetic chemicals are so ubiquitous in modern life that nearly all Americans, including newborn babies, carry PFAS in their bloodstrea­m. Dubbed “forever chemicals” because they do not break down and persist in the environmen­t, the chemicals seep into soil and water. As many as 200 million Americans are exposed to PFAS in their tap water, according to a peer reviewed 2020 study.

Last year the EPA found the chemicals could cause harm at levels “much lower than previously understood” and that almost no level of exposure was safe. It advised that drinking water contain no more than 0.004 parts per trillion of perfluoroo­ctanoic acid and 0.02 parts per trillion of perfluoroo­ctane-sulfonic acid. Previously, the agency had advised that drinking water contain no more than 70 parts per trillion of the chemicals.

The EPA will accept public comments on the proposed regulation for 60 days before it will take effect and become the legal limit.

Public health groups and environmen­tal advocates said the crackdown was long overdue.

“Regulating these six highly toxic PFAS chemicals in drinking water is a historic start to protecting our families and communitie­s,” said Anna Reade, a senior scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmen­tal group. “We can-

not safeguard public health until we get off this toxic treadmill of regulating one PFAS at a time when thousands of other PFAS remain unregulate­d.”

Mark Ruffalo, an actor who has used his celebrity status to lobby for stronger drinking water standards, said the government’s decision was a long time in the making.

“And I know it took a lot of political guts,” he said.

Ruffalo said he was inspired to take action after reading a New York Times profile of Rob Bilott, a corporate attorney who took on Dupont. Ruffalo said he was frustrated to find that industrial chemicals known both by manufactur­ers and regulators to be dangerous to humans were being discharged daily into the air and water. (Ruffalo later portrayed Bilott in the 2019 film “Dark Waters.”)

“Over and over I see the same model play out,” Ruffalo said. “It’s a coziness that the industry has to power. They all game the system in order to make money over people’s health.”

Some Republican­s and industry groups criticized the proposed regulation and said the Biden administra­tion has created an impossible standard that will cost manufactur­ers and municipal water agencies billions of dollars. Industries would have to stop dischargin­g the chemicals into waterways, and water utilities would have to test for the PFAS chemicals and remove them. Communitie­s with limited resources would be hardest hit by the new rule, they warned.

The EPA estimated that it would cost water utilities about $772 million to comply with the rule. But Tom Dobbins, CEO of the Associatio­n of Metropolit­an Water Agencies, which represents some of the largest public water utilities in the country, said the estimated cost for a single entity to filter out PFAS, the Cape Fear Public Utility Authority in North Carolina, was $43 million.

The organizati­on “is concerned about the overall cost drinking water utilities will incur to comply with this proposed rulemaking,” Dobbins said in a statement. He added that the group plans to issue formal comments “to help strengthen the rule and ensure decisions are made with the best available science while taking costs into account.”

The American Chemistry Council, which represents chemical manufactur­ers, noted that the two chemicals being regulated were phased out of production by its members eight years ago.

The group said it supported drinking water standards for the chemicals based on “the best available science” but questioned the EPA’S rationale and said it was an “overly conservati­ve approach” that was misguided.

But some past critics of environmen­tal regulation praised the plan.

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.VA., said in a statement that she was “pleased a safe drinking water standard has finally been issued” for the chemicals. “No one should have to wonder if their water is safe to drink, and it’s critical that we get this important regulation right,” she said.

Regan made the announceme­nt in North Carolina, where he previously served as the state’s top environmen­tal regulator. After startlingl­y high concentrat­ions of the chemicals were found in several sources of public drinking water, he helped broker an agreement that required the Chemours Co. to pay a $13 million fine.

“As a former state regulator, I was really looking for the kind of leadership from the federal government that EPA is now demonstrat­ing,” he said, adding that the plan will protect communitie­s from exposure to chemicals that are known to be dangerous and hold polluters accountabl­e.

He also said money from a $9 billion package that Congress gave the EPA last year as part of an infrastruc­ture bill to invest in water programs will go toward helping states with costs.

In addition to endangerin­g human health, PFAS chemicals also pose a problem for wildlife. The Environmen­tal Working Group, a nonprofit advocacy organizati­on, has created a map based on hundreds of studies showing where the pollutants have been detected in animals, fish and birds, threatenin­g species like dolphins and endangered sea turtles.

Water utilities said they have been preparing for tough standards. Across the country, cities and states have already been cracking down on PFAS in drinking water. States that have proposed or adopted limits include Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticu­t, Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Maine, Massachuse­tts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Rhode Island and Vermont, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2022) ?? A Jackson State engineerin­g graduate questions EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan, center, on Nov. 15, 2022, in Jackson, Miss., on efforts to deliver a sustainabl­e water system for Jackson residents. Regan is joined on the panel by Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, left, and Radhika Fox, assistant administra­tor for water with the EPA.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2022) A Jackson State engineerin­g graduate questions EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan, center, on Nov. 15, 2022, in Jackson, Miss., on efforts to deliver a sustainabl­e water system for Jackson residents. Regan is joined on the panel by Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, left, and Radhika Fox, assistant administra­tor for water with the EPA.

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