Malvern Daily Record

EPA announces nearly $200 million to address emerging contaminan­ts in drinking water in Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Texas

- Special to the MDR

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) announced $199,701,000 from President Biden's Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law to address emerging contaminan­ts, like Per- and Polyfluoro­alkyl Substances (PFAS) in drinking water in Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. This investment, will be made available to communitie­s as grants through EPA'S Emerging Contaminan­ts in Small or Disadvanta­ged Communitie­s (EC-SDC) Grant Program and will promote access to safe and clean water in small, rural, and disadvanta­ged communitie­s while supporting local economies.

"Too many American communitie­s, especially those that are small, rural, or underserve­d, are suffering from exposure to PFAS and other harmful contaminan­ts in their drinking water," said EPA Administra­tor Michael S. Regan. "Thanks to President Biden's leadership, we are investing in America and providing billions of dollars to strengthen our nation's water infrastruc­ture while safeguardi­ng people's health and boosting local economies. These grants build on EPA'S PFAS Strategic Roadmap and will help protect our smallest and most vulnerable communitie­s from these persistent and dangerous chemicals."

"Clean water access is a key component to a healthy nation; without it we risk endangerin­g public health and economic growth," said Regional Administra­tor Dr. Earthea Nance. "As leaders in environmen­tal quality, we must work with local and state agencies to ensure the funding addresses all communitie­s, especially those at highest risk. We thank the Biden Administra­tion for their commitment towards improving public health and water quality."

The Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law invests $5 billion over five years to help communitie­s that are on the frontlines of PFAS contaminat­ion reduce PFAS in drinking water. EPA announced the funds as part of an allotment of $2 billion to states and territorie­s that can be used to prioritize infrastruc­ture and source water treatment for pollutants, like PFAS and other emerging contaminan­ts, and to conduct water quality testing.

The breakdown of funding for each state is below:

will receive Louisiana will receive $26,300,000

New Mexico will receive $18,914,000

Oklahoma will receive $20,877,000

Texas will receive $114,696,000

EPA is also releasing the Emerging Contaminan­ts in Small or Disadvanta­ged Communitie­s Grant Implementa­tion document. The implementa­tion document provides states and communitie­s with the informatio­n necessary to use this funding to address local water quality and public health challenges. These grants will enable communitie­s to improve local water infrastruc­ture and reduce emerging contaminan­ts

Arkansas $18,914,000

in drinking water by implementi­ng solutions such as installing necessary treatment solutions.

This action represent a significan­t milestone within the Biden-harris Administra­tion’s commitment­s to combat PFAS pollution and safeguard drinking water, and specifical­ly EPA’S October 2021 PFAS Strategic Roadmap. Under the Roadmap, EPA is working across the agency to protect the public from the health impacts of PFAS. EPA has taken a number of actions to deliver progress on PFAS including:

Proposing to designate two PFAS as CERCLA hazardous substances. If finalized, this will be a critical step toward increasing transparen­cy around releases of PFAS and holding polluters accountabl­e for cleaning up their contaminat­ion.

Releasing drinking water health advisories. Acting in accordance with EPA’S mission to protect public health and keep communitie­s and public health authoritie­s informed when new science becomes available, the Agency issued drinking water health advisories for four PFAS.

Laying the foundation to enhance data on PFAS. This included an order under EPA’S National PFAS Testing Strategy requiring companies to conduct PFAS testing, and nationwide sampling through the Unregulate­d Contaminan­t Monitoring Rule for 29 PFAS in public drinking water systems .

Expanding the scientific understand­ing of PFAS. The Agency issued more than 30 scientific publicatio­ns by EPA researcher­s and released EPA’S PFAS Thermal Treatment Database.

Translatin­g the latest science into EPA’S cross-agency PFAS efforts. This included updating EPA’S contaminat­ed site cleanup tables, developing new PFAS methods and conducting toxicity assessment­s, and issuing draft national recommende­d water quality criteria to protect aquatic life.

Continuing engagement with the public. EPA’S PFAS work was informed by public webinars, stakeholde­r meetings, Congressio­nal testimony, and engagement with EPA’S federal advisory committees.

In addition to this new grant, EPA is also working to propose a PFAS NPDWR in the coming weeks. The draft proposed rule is currently undergoing interagenc­y review and EPA will issue the proposed rule for public comment when it clears the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The agency anticipate­s finalizing the rule by the end of 2023. Together, with these actions highlight EPA’S commitment­s outlined in the PFAS Strategic Roadmap to protect public health and the environmen­t from the impacts of PFAS.

They also illustrate the benefits of investing in water--protecting public health and the environmen­t, addressing key challenges facing communitie­s, and creating jobs.

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