The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Petroleum in tap water alarms military families

- By Audrey Mcavoy

HONOLULU » Cheri Burness’ dog was the first to signal something was wrong with the family’s tap water. He stopped drinking it two weeks ago. Then Burness started feeling stomach cramps. Her 12-yearold daughter was nauseous.

“It was just getting worse every day,” said Burness, whose husband is in the Navy.

Their family is among hundreds of military families living near Pearl Harbor with similar complaints after the Navy’s water system somehow became contaminat­ed by petroleum.

The problems have afflicted one of the most important Navy bases in the world, home to submarines, ships and the commander of U.S. forces in the IndoPacifi­c region. The issues may even threaten one of Honolulu’s most important aquifers and water sources.

The Navy said Thursday that tests had identified petroleum in its Red Hill well which taps into an aquifer near the base. Rear Adm. Blake Converse, Pacific Fleet deputy commander, told a town-hall meeting the Navy took this well offline on Sunday because it was the closest well to affected housing areas.

Converse said the Navy will flush clean water through its distributi­on system to clear residual petroleum products from the water. The process, followed by testing to make sure it the water meets Environmen­tal Protection Agency drinking standards, could take four to ten days, he said.

The Navy will also investigat­e how contaminan­ts got into the well and fix it, he said.

The crisis came after the Navy on Nov. 22 said a water and fuel mixture had leaked into a fire-suppressio­n system drain line in a tunnel at a massive fuel storage facility 3 miles inland of Pearl Harbor. The Navy said it removed about 14,000 gallons of the mixture, and said the liquid hadn’t leaked into the environmen­t.

The Navy said so far it has received calls about a fuel odor or physical ailments from 680 homes in Navy housing and 270 in Army housing on the Navy’s water system. The Navy water system serves 93,000 people.

In the days after Thanksgivi­ng, Burness’s daughter felt so sick she didn’t want to eat any leftovers, including potatoes, turnips and carrots that had been boiled in water.

“‘I don’t want you to have to throw out food because I know it’s expensive, but I can’t eat this Mom,’” Burness said her daughter told her.

On Sunday, Burness started seeing comments on social media from military families saying their tap water smelled like fuel. She didn’t smell it, but people told her to turn on her hot water and check. She did and smelled it too.

She told her family not to drink the water and not to wash their hair and face with it. She ordered private water delivery for $120 a month. They family has mostly been eating off of plastic and paper plates, and eating out.

On Monday, when she gave her dog some bottled water, he immediatel­y drank a full liter, then drank two more liters over the next 12 hours.

The Navy has since started distributi­ng bottled water, and said Marines would set up showers and laundry facilities connected to clean water.It is also setting up dedicated medical clinics.

Environmen­tal and Native Hawaiian groups, meanwhile, are demanding a meeting with Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro. He Is scheduled to visit Hawaii next week to attend a ceremony marking the 80th anniversar­y of the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor.

Burness said her stomach cramps are about 85% better, but not over. Her daughter’s nausea has improved. But are now complainin­g of breathing issues.

Burness has been frustrated with the Navy’s response, which she believes has been dismissive of families’ concerns. She pointed to a Monday email from the commander of Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam that told residents the Navy was testing water samples but it had no immediate indication the water wasn’t safe. His email said he and his staff were drinking the water.

“All they had to do was say; ‘We see that there’s a problem, we don’t know what it is and we’re going to do whatever it takes to find out and fix it.’ That’s all they had to do. And instead, we got, ‘Nope. Looks good. Smells fine. Bye,’” Burness said.

Navy Region Hawaii, which oversees all Navy installati­ons in the state, said the commander’s email was sent when “numbers of concerns were still very low.”

“Since then, the Navy has aggressive­ly increased sampling, testing, communicat­ion to families and others impacted, as well as started response teams of experts to address the issues we all are facing,” the command said in a statement.

The Nov. 22 tunnel leak was only the latest involving the Red Hill Fuel Storage Facility, a complex of 20 undergroun­d fuel tanks built during World War II. Environmen­talists and Honolulu’s municipal water utility have expressed concerns about the aging tanks since the Navy disclosed one of them leaked 27,000 gallons in 2014.

The tanks sit 100 feet above an aquifer that supplies about a quarter of the water consumed in Honolulu, prompting concerns that leaks could contaminat­e one of the city’s most crucial water sources. This is the same aquifer tapped by the Red Hill well where the Navy just detected petroleum.

Last month, the Sierra Club of Hawaii and other environmen­tal groups called on the government to shut down the tanks.

 ?? U.S. NAVY — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A tunnel inside the Red Hill Undergroun­d Fuel Storage Facility in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Jan. 26, 2018. A petroleum product was detected in a water sample near Pearl Harbor.
U.S. NAVY — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A tunnel inside the Red Hill Undergroun­d Fuel Storage Facility in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Jan. 26, 2018. A petroleum product was detected in a water sample near Pearl Harbor.

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