Albuquerque Journal

Military to check 664 sites for water poisoning

Contaminat­ion may have come from foam used to fight fires

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. — The military plans to examine hundreds of sites nationwide to determine whether chemicals from foam used to fight fires have contaminat­ed groundwate­r and spread to drinking water, the Defense Department said.

The checks are planned for 664 sites where the military has conducted fire or crash training, military officials told The Associated Press this week.

Since December, tests have been carried out at 28 naval sites in mostly coastal areas. Drinking water at a landing field in Virginia and the groundwate­r at another site in New Jersey have been found to contain levels above the guidance given by the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency, the Navy said. Results of the other tests have either come up under federally acceptable levels or are pending.

The Navy is giving bottled water to its personnel at the Naval Auxiliary Landing Field Fentress in Chesapeake, Va., and is testing wells in a nearby rural area after the discovery of perfluorin­ated chemicals in drinking water, which the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry says may be associated with prostate, kidney and testicular cancer, along with other health issues.

The Navy found perfluorin­ated chemicals in groundwate­r monitoring wells at Naval Weapons Station Earle in Colts Neck, N.J., but not in the drinking water supply. Test results from off-base drinking water wells are expected this month.

Several congressme­n are raising concerns about the safety of drinking water near two former Navy bases in suburban Philadelph­ia. The lawmakers say firefighti­ng foams might be the source of chemicals found in nearly 100 public and private wells near the Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Willow Grove and the Naval Air Warfare Center in Warminster.

The foam is used where potentiall­y catastroph­ic fuel fires can occur, such as in a plane crash. It contains perfluoroo­ctane sulfonate and perfluoroo­ctanoic acid, or PFOS and PFOA, both considered emerging contaminan­ts by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

The Defense Department said that, until foam without perfluorin­ated chemicals can be certified for military use, it is removing stocks of it in some places and trying to prevent any uncontroll­ed releases during training exercises.

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