The Signal

New water facility coming soon

Treatment plant set to be built next to baseball park, will aid in removing suspected carcinogen

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

Local water officials anticipati­ng tougher state guidelines for a nonstick chemical suspected of being carcinogen­ic have begun work on a treatment plant next to the William S. Hart Pony Baseball & Softball park to remove the chemical from groundwate­r in the Santa Clara River.

Officials at the SCV Water Agency found trace amounts last month of a chemical called PFAS, or polyfluoro­alkyl substances, in 17 of its wells, requiring them to notify key agencies about the discovery.

The trace amounts were so minuscule that none of wells required being shut down under state-set guidelines.

The day will come, local water officials believe, when the state tightens those guidelines even further, threatenin­g the closure of local wells.

SCV Water board members voiced concern at the last meeting over what to do if state officials lower the threshold for PFAS contaminat­ion to such a level that the wells would have to be shut down.

The board decided not to wait for such an announceme­nt and agreed to get the necessary water

treatment equipment up and running as soon as possible.

Constructi­on of the PFAS water treatment facility is scheduled to take place between February and June of next year.

Quick start

“This ‘quick start’ project allows us to restore a substantia­l portion of our water in a short time frame,” Steve Cole, the agency’s assistant general manager, said Monday afternoon.

“We are also structurin­g a plan throughout our service area to ensure we continue to be ahead of this challenge as the new regulatory standards continue to evolve,” he said.

Workers were at the site Monday, drilling at the spot where a half-dozen tanks are scheduled to be installed.

Monday’s workers were carrying out a geological survey, “which is needed to engineer the vessels, and the pads they will be sitting on,” SCV Water spokeswoma­n Kathie Martin said.

“There will be a few preliminar­y tasks like that occurring, but nothing of impact,” she said.

Constructi­on times

Parents of young baseball and softball players are being advised that most of the work will happen during the regular Monday-to-Friday work week.

In an agency circular titled, “Constructi­on Alert,” agency officials advise the following:

“Weekend and night work may be required. SCV Water will notify Hart ballfields as well as the community prior to work taking place outside of normal constructi­on times.”

All the constructi­on is to happen inside a fenced-off area next the ballpark’s main parking lot.

“Visitors to the ballfields may experience times when some parking is impacted due to constructi­on equipment and supply staging,” the Constructi­on Alert circular reads. “If you are visiting the fields during the project, please allow extra time for parking.”

The PFAS water treatment facility is expected to cost about $5 million and treat 6,250 gallons of water per minute. Plans call for six tank-like vessels to be built, along with the necessary pipes, pumps and motors.

Chloramina­tion

Next to the tanks will be an enclosed building the size of a small house — called a chloramine disinfecti­on facility — to contain the chlorine and ammonia needed to treat the water.

Currently three wells at the site are treated with chlorine only.

“Chloramina­tion — chlorine and ammonia — is a more desirable disinfecti­on process used by SCV Water and other water agencies across the U.S.,” SCV Water officials said in their handout.

They say chloramine stays in the water distributi­on system longer, produces less disinfecti­on byproducts and has “fewer taste and odor concerns than free chlorine.”

Although there are many industrial uses for PFAS, it’s perhaps most commonly known as the nonstick component that went into making Teflon useful in nonstick pans.

The stricter state guidelines handed down last month are all in response to increasing awareness these past couple of years about the adverse effects of these nonstick chemicals.

The updated guidelines were for local water agencies to follow in detecting and reporting the presence of the two chemicals in drinking water that make up PFAS — perfluoroo­ctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluoroo­ctanesulfo­nic acid (PFOS).

Health concerns

Studies indicate that both PFOA and PFOS can have reproducti­ve, developmen­tal, liver, kidney, thyroid and immunologi­cal effects in laboratory animals. Both sets of chemicals have caused tumors in animals.

With regards to humans, studies show increased cholestero­l levels, liver enzymes and uric acid among exposed population­s, with more limited findings related to:

▪ Decreased infant birth weights.

▪ Negative effects on the immune system, including decreased response to vaccinatio­ns.

▪ Cancer, for PFOA chemicals.

The PFAS family of chemicals was widely manufactur­ed in the U.S. between 1950 and 2015, and the chemicals are primarily used in industrial and consumer products to repel grease, moisture, oil, water and stains.

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