Albuquerque Journal

NM wants court to speed up toxic foam lawsuit

- BY THERESA DAVIS JOURNAL STAFF WRITER Theresa Davis is a Report for America corps member covering water and the environmen­t for the Albuquerqu­e Journal.

New Mexico is asking a federal court to reverse a decision that combined its lawsuit against the Air Force over contaminat­ion at military bases with lawsuits filed in other districts.

At issue is PFAS (per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances), a class of toxins in the firefighti­ng foam used for training exercises at Cannon and Holloman Air Force bases.

The New Mexico Environmen­t Department and the New Mexico state attorney general filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit on Monday.

New Mexico argues that multidistr­ict litigation means “the State’s case must now take a back seat to water providers and other private litigants seeking to recover money damages.”

The state sued the Air Force in July 2019. New Mexico asked a federal court to compel the Air Force to outline contaminat­ion plumes at Cannon and Holloman, test water sources and clean up the chemicals.

In June 2020, a federal panel transferre­d the lawsuit into the U.S. District of South Carolina.

“The matter has now been pending in the (multidistr­ict litigation) for more than six months, despite the ongoing injuries to human health and the environmen­t,” New Mexico’s petition reads.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency has linked PFAS contaminat­ion to low birth weights, high cholestero­l and certain cancers.

State Attorney General Hector Balderas said returning the case to a federal court in New Mexico would give the matter “the immediate and proper attention it deserves.”

The Air Force first informed the state of PFAS in groundwate­r at Cannon in 2018. The waterproof nature of the “forever chemicals” makes them difficult to remove.

“What is at stake is the health and livelihood of New Mexico families — families that just want the Defense Department to do the right thing, and get PFAS out of their lives and communitie­s for good,” said NMED Cabinet Secretary James Kenney.

Another demand in New Mexico’s original lawsuit is that the Air Force provide alternativ­e water and voluntary blood tests to those who may have been exposed to the toxins.

At least one Clovis-area dairy was forced to euthanize its cows because of groundwate­r contaminat­ion that likely migrated from Cannon Air Force Base.

Maggie Hart Stebbins, state natural resources trustee, said New Mexico has been aggressive at tackling an environmen­tal issue that is gaining national prominence.

“We do intend to pursue a natural resource damage claim (for PFAS), but there’s still a few steps that need to happen before we can pursue that,” Hart Stebbins told the Journal prior to Monday’s court filing. “We have to wait on the Environmen­t Department and the responsibl­e parties to characteri­ze and evaluate the extent of PFAS contaminat­ion, and that will take some time.”

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