Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Chemical contaminat­ion found at military sites in Wisconsin

- Lee Bergquist

An emerging class of chemical compounds discovered at a Johnson Controls affiliate in northern Wisconsin has also been found at Wisconsin military sites, including the Air National Guard 128th Air Refueling Wing in Milwaukee.

Known as perfluorin­ated chemicals, the widely manufactur­ed compounds are prompting heightened concerns nationally because of their potential impacts on human health.

A federal draft report released in June found the chemicals present a greater public health risk than previously known.

The report said epidemiolo­gy studies suggest that the chemicals are associated with increased risk of pregnancy-induced hypertensi­on, liver damage, thyroid disease, asthma, decreased fertility, some cancers and a decline in response to vaccines.

In Wisconsin, much of the concern stems from the chemicals when they are used to fight fires at military bases and industrial sites.

The chemicals, including perfluoroo­ctanoic acid, or PFOA, and perfluoroo­cta-nesulfonic acid, or PFOS, are used in fireretard­ant foams and in products such as Teflon and rain wear.

The chemicals can seep into soil and pollute surface water and groundwate­r and potentiall­y contaminat­e drinking water.

Records and email correspond­ence from the Department of Natural Resources show the compounds have been found in the soil and groundwate­r at sites of the 128th, as well as the 440th Airlift Wing of the Air Force Reserve. The 440th moved to a base in North Carolina in 2007.

Also, PFOA and PFOS have been detected in ponds and sediments at the 128th.

According to the agency, the pair of chemicals have been found in concentrat­ions above the current federal lifetime health advisory level for drinking water of 70 parts per trillion.

There is no sign, however, that they have infiltrate­d private wells, according to DNR records.

DNR spokesman Jim Dick said in an email that the Air National Guard has submitted plans to remove the contaminan­ts from the air field.

In addition, records show similar types of contaminat­ion have been found at Fort McCoy between Sparta and Tomah; at Volk Field at Camp Douglas in Juneau County and at Truax Field in Madison.

The City of Madison detected per-flourinate­d compounds in 2017 in one well near Truax, but below the health advisory of 70 parts per trillion.

In November 2017, the Air Force said it was investigat­ing the extent of contaminat­ion on all of its properties and replacing chemical stockpiles with “more environmen­tally responsibl­e formulatio­ns.”

State investigat­ions

Other states are investigat­ing whether the chemicals are in public drinking water. In Michigan, the state is spending $1.7 million to test water and said on Aug. 21 it is finding evidence of the compounds. Only one community, Parchment near Kalamazoo, is so far known from the surveys to have drinking water with concentrat­ions above 70 parts trillion.

Some health and environmen­tal groups are pressing the Trump administra­tion to set stricter guidance than that, and some states have moved independen­tly to clamp down on the chemicals.

EPA and White House officials in January wanted to delay the publicatio­n of the June draft study, which could lead to tougher limits on the chemicals, according to emails made public under open records requests by the Union of Concerned Scientists, an advocacy group.

In March, the DNR asked the state Department of Health Services to recommend safe levels for 16 substances found in groundwate­r, including PFOA and PFOS. The evaluation process is continuing, a health official said.

Wisconsin’s rule-making process to regulate new chemicals can take years to complete and require a review by the Legislatur­e.

At a Tyco Fire Products manufactur­ing plant in Marinette, the company has been providing drinking water systems to residents whose private wells are polluted. The company is also evaluating strategies to remove the chemicals from ditches leading to Green Bay and Lake Michigan.

Tyco, a unit of Johnson Controls in Glendale, is monitoring the extent of groundwate­r contaminat­ion. In late 2017, the company began investigat­ing how chemicals had strayed from the property and how best to contain the pollutants.

“The Tyco-Marinette situation pointed out that this emerging … issue was something that had to be addressed” by multiple divisions within the agency, Dick said.

That prompted officials to organize an internal work group to try to determine the scope of the problem in Wisconsin and how best to proceed.

Laura OIah is executive director of Citizens for Safe Water Around Badger, a group that was organized over longstandi­ng pollution problems at the former Badger Army Ammunition Center in Sauk County.

She praised the DNR for trying to better understand the problem but called on the agency to do more.

“We know there are at least four military installati­ons in Wisconsin where there is contaminat­ion,” Olah said.

“But there has to be more communicat­ions with the public,” she said. “They need to know more about the chemicals, the extent of groundwate­r flow and the potential impact on them.”

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