Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Bottled water doesn’t solve all PFAS woes

- Laura Schulte Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK - WISCONSIN

For years, Wisconsin has been grappling with “forever chemical” contaminat­ions in some of its towns and cities, making it so residents can’t drink the water from their own wells.

Those chemicals, known as PFAS — per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances — have been linked to all kinds of health risks, including types of kidney and testicular cancers, lower birth weights and harm to immune and reproducti­ve systems.

PFAS, a large family of man-made chemicals, were once prized for their nonstick characteri­stics and were used to make nonstick pans, waterproof clothing and other items. They’re also commonly used in fast food wrappers, to keep the grease from leaking out.

The chemicals accumulate in the body over time, meaning the more consumed via food or water, the more is stored in the body.

In Wisconsin, the chemicals have ended up in the soil in many places — including Marinettte, Peshtigo, Milwaukee and Madison — due to the use and testing of fire fighting foam used to put out blazes involving gas.

In the communitie­s dealing with those contaminat­ions, many residents can no longer drink or cook with the water from their sinks, forcing them to rely on weekly shipments of bottled water, paid for by the polluting party or, in some cases, the state Department of Natural Resources.

Scott Manley, executive vice president for government relations for Wisconsin Manufactur­ers & Commerce, the state’s largest business lobbying group, during a Jan. 31 interview about the chemicals on WKOW’s “Capital City Sunday” said that residents aren’t put at risk by the contaminat­ion if they’re getting the bottled water.

“People who have wells that test for elevated levels of PFAS are currently being provided clean drinking water at the expense of the responsibl­e party, so nobody’s health is at risk right now,” he said.

That stopped us.

Is it true that there is no risk to people within polluted areas if they’re receiving bottled water shipments for drinking and cooking?

PFAS contaminat­ion extends beyond groundwate­r, wells

Let’s start with some background. One of the most well-known areas where bottled water has to be provided to residents is in Marinette and Peshtigo in northeaste­rn Wisconsin.

The PFAS in that area originated at the Tyco Fire Products firefighting foam testing facility, which saw outdoor testing of foam up until 2017.

The foam was washed into sanitary sewers after testing, allowing PFAS to leach into the ground. The PFAS in the soil at the testing plant later leached out of the boundaries of the testing facility, carried by groundwate­r, and have been found in private wells across the area.

Tyco, a subsidiary of Johnson Controls, is paying to provide bottled water or water treatment systems to residents with PFAS in their wells above a certain level and has set aside money to work toward providing the residents with a water system for all affected in the future, in cooperatio­n with the City of Marinette.

When asked for backup to support Manley’s claim, Nick Novak, vice president of communicat­ions and marketing for WMC, essentiall­y repeated what Manley said:

“Parties responsibl­e for elevated levels of specific PFAS substances have supplied affected communitie­s with bottled water or water filtration systems in the near term while working closely with regulators and community members on long-term potable water solutions to ensure no one’s health or safety is put at risk.”

But environmen­tal groups disagree with the assertion that no one’s health is at risk. And various studies also cite known concerns.

Carly Michiels, government relations director for Clean Wisconsin, noted that water is not the only thing affected by PFAS contaminat­ion.

“There are also considerat­ions like the contaminat­ed biosolids that have been spread on farm fields, or waterways that have contaminat­ed the fish, which would all impact a person’s public health,” she said. “Drinking water out of a tap is only one source of exposure in a large PFAS hot spot.”

Biosolids, or the sludge taken out of waste water treatment systems, is typically spread on farm fields, and PFAS can be found in soil in contaminat­ed areas.

Though not yet conclusive, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion is studying how crops can absorb PFAS, which could then be consumed and added to the accumulati­on of the chemicals in a person’s body.

Studies in Wisconsin have shown that PFAS also accumulate in fish, which has resulted in the DNR issuing warnings about consuming fish from certain areas more than once or twice a month.

Fish in ponds in Marinette have shown elevated levels of PFAS, according to an October report from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, as well as fish in Madison lakes and even Lake Superior. Elevated levels of PFAS have also been found in the livers of deer in the Marinette area, prompting the DNR to issue consumptio­n advisories for the organs, according to a September report in the Journal Sentinel.

So even though residents may have access to clean water via deliveries of bottled water, there is still a risk of consuming contaminat­ed produce, fish or meat from the area, which could contribute to a buildup of PFAS in the body.

Our ruling

Manley claimed that no one’s health is at risk if they’re receiving bottled drinking water due to contaminat­ion in their home’s water supply.

While precaution­s put in place to provide safe drinking water have helped mitigate the problem in the short term, residents can still ingest PFAS through other means, such as meat or fish hunted from nearby land, or possibly even produce harvested from areas where PFAS are present in the soil.

We rate the claim False.

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