Oroville Mercury-Register

Water near Arizona Air Force base is tainted in latest case

- By Anita Snow

PHOENIX >> The U.S. Air Force says it will be distributi­ng bottled water to thousands of residents and business owners near its base in suburban Phoenix until at least April, marking the latest case of chemicals from military firefighti­ng efforts contaminat­ing the water supply in a nearby community.

Luke Air Force Base announced this month that studies showed high levels of contaminan­ts had affected drinking water for about 6,000 people in roughly 1,600 homes as well as a few neighborin­g businesses.

A contractor is scheduling deliveries of drinking water to the homes of people who picked up their first bottles this week, said Sean Clements, chief of public affairs for the 56th Fighter Wing at the base. Those deliveries will go on until a long-term filtration facility can be set up in April, Clements said Thursday.

The base has recommende­d people use bottled water for drinking and cooking but deemed tap water safe for bathing and laundry.

Similar contaminat­ion tied to the use of firefighti­ng foam has been found in water supplies near dozens of military sites in Arizona, Colorado and other states and has triggered hundreds of lawsuits. Growing evidence that it’s dangerous to be exposed to the chemicals found in the foam has prompted the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency to consider setting a maximum level for those chemicals in drinking water nationwide.

Not currently regulated

But they aren’t regulated now, meaning the base can’t be punished even though the EPA says the chemicals stay in the body for long periods and may cause adverse health effects.

The Arizona Corporatio­n Commission, which regulates utilities, is scheduling an emergency meeting next week with five water companies to discuss concerns about the contaminat­ion, said Caroline Oppleman, spokeswoma­n for the Arizona Department of Environmen­tal Quality.

Oppleman said her agency is working with the base, regulators and federal and local officials to ensure actions are taken to ensure healthy drinking water for residents.

A statement from Luke Air Force Base last week said testing had detected levels of perfluoroo­ctanoic acid and perfluoroo­ctane sulfonate above the EPA’s health advisory for how much should be consumed in drinking water over a person’s lifetime.

The so- called forever chemicals from a class known collective­ly as PFAS were found during tests of water from Valley Utilities Water Co. The compounds are used in many industrial and consumer products and in foam used by commercial industries and the armed services to extinguish fuel fires.

The company said its water meets all EPA and Arizona drinking water standards and that no treatment is required because PFAS are not regulated by federal or state environmen­tal agencies.

 ?? KEN LEVINE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? F-16 Fighting Falcons sit on the tarmac at Luke Air Force Base in Glendale, Ariz.
KEN LEVINE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE F-16 Fighting Falcons sit on the tarmac at Luke Air Force Base in Glendale, Ariz.

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