USA TODAY US Edition

Critics scoff at EPA plan to regulate tap water toxins

- Ledyard King

WASHINGTON – The EPA announced plans Thursday to regulate a set of harmful chemicals found in drinking water systems that serve millions of Americans.

The process, which is likely to take months at least, is designed to set a maximum contaminan­t level for polyfluoro­alkyl substances (PFAS), a manmade substance found in commercial household items such as food packaging, cleaners, water-repellent fabrics, Teflon-coated cookware and cleaning products.

Contaminan­ts are also found in firefighti­ng foams, which have seeped into groundwate­r sources that reach millions of drinking taps.

Environmen­tal advocates and congressio­nal Democrats criticized the move as little more than a stalling tactic to protect industry interests, given the health risks known about the chemicals.

The chemicals have been linked to reproducti­ve and developmen­tal, liver and kidney, and immunologi­cal effects. Research has shown they can contribute to low infant birth weights, thyroid problems and some cancers.

“The action plan commits EPA to take important steps that will improve how we research, monitor, detect and address PFAS,” Andrew Wheeler, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s acting administra­tor, said at a news conference in Philadelph­ia.

By the end of the year, the agency will propose a regulatory determinat­ion, which is the next step legally required under the Safe Drinking Water Act to establish a “maximum contaminan­t level” for the chemicals, Wheeler said. The agency is reviewing whether similar chemicals should be regulated, he said.

The EPA plans to list the harmful chemicals as contaminan­ts under its Superfund program, which would give the agency more authority to pursue polluters.

Despite the move, environmen­tal groups slammed the EPA for moving too slowly. Several states already have taken to steps to limit or ban PFAS and highlighte­d their risks to the public.

“This so-called plan is actually a recipe for more PFAS contaminat­ion, not less,” said Scott Faber, senior vice president for government affairs at the Environmen­tal Working Group. “It’s shameful that the EPA has taken two decades to produce a plan that allows increased exposure to compounds whose makers have used the American people as guinea pigs and, with the EPA’s complicity, covered it up.”

The organizati­on has studied the issue for almost 20 years. It estimates that more than 1,500 drinking water systems, serving up to 110 million Americans, may be contaminat­ed with some levels of those chemicals.

The EPA establishe­d health advisory levels at 70 parts per trillion.

A study in 2016 by university researcher­s and published by the National Institutes of Health found that more than 6 million Americans were provided tap water above the 70 parts per trillion standard.

Delaware Sen. Tom Carper, the top Democrat on the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee, called Wheeler’s announceme­nt “insufficie­ntly protective.”

 ?? ALEX EDELMAN/PICTURE-ALLIANCE/DP ?? Andrew Wheeler says the EPA is committed to improving the way it deals with chemicals known as PFAS.
ALEX EDELMAN/PICTURE-ALLIANCE/DP Andrew Wheeler says the EPA is committed to improving the way it deals with chemicals known as PFAS.

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