Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Plan in works to keep toxic chemicals from reaching Green Bay

- Lee Bergquist

A Johnson Controls subsidiary in Marinette said it is planning to install pollution-control systems in two waterways to keep toxic chemicals now likely flowing into Green Bay from reaching the water.

The efforts of Tyco Fire Products — a maker of fire suppressio­n foam — to keep pollutants from seeping into Lake Michigan waters are believed to be unpreceden­ted in Wisconsin, according to the Department of Natural Resources.

The cleanup process to remove the compounds known as perfluorin­ated chemicals could take years, according to the company.

Emails and other documents paint a complex cleanup process because the contaminan­ts have seeped into groundwate­r and surface water at multiple points over the years, flowing gradually to Green Bay.

Perfluorin­ated chemicals are coming under growing scrutiny nationally because of their potential harmful health effects, widespread use in products ranging from fire retardants to non-stick pans, and because of their difficulty to break down in the environmen­t.

A federal draft report released in June found chemicals like those coming from the Tyco site — perfluoroo­ctanoic acid, or PFOA, and perfluoroo­ctanesulfo­nic acid, or PFOS — could be a greater public health risk than previously known.

Studies suggest the compounds 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.

Early testing

“Our intention is to continue to work with local and state officials to identify, test and potentiall­y remediate those areas where these compounds are found.” Fraser Engerman Johnson Controls spokesman

In November 2017, Tyco began investigat­ing the spread of PFOA and PFOS from a fire training facility it operates in Marinette and where the chemicals have been sprayed during training sessions for decades. (Tyco has also said it has found chemicals in groundwate­r a few miles away in monitoring wells at a manufactur­ing plant along the Menominee River, a Green Bay tributary.)

The work has included sampling surface and groundwate­r, and private wells in the area. The chemicals have turned up

at various concentrat­ions in all three, according to the company.

In July, Tyco began offering water treatment systems to any property owner whose well contained the chemicals — regardless of whether it exceeded the current federal lifetime health advisory.

Removing contaminan­ts

In the most recent developmen­ts, Tyco is asking Marinette County officials for an easement on land in a county park about 50 feet from Green Bay to remove contaminan­ts from a waterbody known as Ditch B.

The company briefed members of the Marinette County Board on Wednesday about its plans and hopes to have the system in place this fall.

Tyco has similar plans to test and remove the compounds for a second ditch — Ditch A — on its fire training property, which flows into the Little River, south of Marinette. The Little River is a tributary to Green Bay.

In both cases, the company would assess the extent of the chemicals and remove the compounds using granular activated carbon before water is returned to the ditch, Johnson Controls spokesman Fraser Engerman said in an email.

He said the cleanup project could last at least five years.

“Our intention is to continue to work with local and state officials to identify, test and potentiall­y remediate those areas where these compounds are found,” Engerman said.

Ditch B does not pass through Tyco property. It was built decades ago to drain agricultur­al land and flows into Green Bay near the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay’s Marinette campus.

Responding to questions from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, DNR officials said in emails that surface and sediment samples in Ditch B show “very low” concentrat­ions of the contaminan­ts as they flow east.

But as the ditch turns southeast toward the bay, measures of the chemicals skyrocket to 2,000 to 3,000 parts per trillion. According to the DNR, this means that groundwate­r feeding the ditch is supplying the contaminan­ts.

“It doesn’t originate from their property,” said John Lefebvre, the county administra­tor. “The only way it can get there is from groundwate­r … at some point, or multiple points.”

Health standards

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency has establishe­d a federal lifetime health advisory level for drinking water of 70 parts per trillion, but is under pressure by environmen­tal and health groups to set a more restrictiv­e limit.

Tyco has said the ditches are not used for drinking water.

Currently, Wisconsin has no standards for acceptable levels of the chemicals in drinking water or groundwate­r.

In March 2, the DNR asked the state Department of Health Services to recommend safe toxicity levels of 16 substances in groundwate­r, including PFOA and PFOS, which could lead to new restrictio­ns on the chemicals. That process is ongoing, state officials have said.

Some states have moved independen­tly to clamp down on the chemicals.

Marinette gets its drinking water from Green Bay. Trace amounts of the chemicals have been found in municipal drinking water, according to city and DNR records. Officials have said that the levels detected are not a threat to public health.

Asked whether Tyco is subject to enforcemen­t proceeding­s, the DNR said the company is following state law to investigat­e the extent of the problem and is addressing concerns about drinking water.

More action demanded

Jeff Lamont is a retired hydrogeolo­gist who worked on toxic cleanups during his career. He lives in Marinette part of the year. His well is contaminat­ed by the chemicals. He and others say they want to see Tyco and the DNR do more to tackle the problem.

The DNR responded that Tyco is addressing contaminat­ion outside its operations first, as required by law, and then will take up the job of removing chemicals on its property.

Lamont told members of the policysett­ing Natural Resources Board on Aug. 8: “This is a problem that is going to get significan­tly more complex in the coming weeks and months.”

He asked the agency to make a damage claim against the company. DNR spokesman Andrew Savagian declined to comment on whether such an action was being contemplat­ed.

After hearing Lamont at the Aug. 8 meeting, board member Frederick Prehn of Wausau asked department officials to provide more details to board members on the Tyco situation.

Savagian said the agency is still working with Tyco, “and is not ready to report back to the (board) just yet.”

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