Inyo Register

Sidewalk Closure

- By Rachel Becker Calmatters

BISHOP - Caltrans announces the project work and traffic impacts for Inyo County for the week of April 22 – April 26. The closure will take place on the northbound side of U.S. 395 between Clark Street and East Line Street in Bishop, there will be sidewalk closures to allow for building constructi­on Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Pedestrian detours will be available. To assist in planning your commute, view live traffic conditions using QuickMap at http://quickmap.dot.ca. gov/.

In an effort to protect more than 5 million California­ns from a cancercaus­ing contaminan­t, state regulators today set a new standard that is expected to increase the cost of water for many people throughout the state.

The State Water Resources Control Board unanimousl­y approved the nation’s first drinking water standard for hexavalent chromium, which is found naturally in some California groundwate­r as well as water contaminat­ed by industries.

Now water suppliers will be forced to install costly treatment to limit the chemical in water to no more than 10 parts per billion — equivalent to about 10 drops in an Olympic-sized swimming pool.

California water systems are expected to spend $180 million a year to comply, including testing and treatment. The water board said the average cost for most people would be less than $20 per month, with 87% paying about $8 per month. The cost rises an average of $135 per month for people served by water agencies with fewer than 100 connection­s.

Water suppliers warned officials that the costs of complying would hit lowincome customers especially hard.

Coachella City Councilman Frank

Figueroa said it would cost his city $90 million to install treatment on its wells, which would increase average monthly bills by almost 500% — “an insufferab­le figure” for the community, where incomes average $24,000 a year per person.

Cities and water agencies said they desperatel­y need financial help from the state.

“This year’s fiscal crunch does not bode well, and even in a good year, they (state officials) can’t get aid to everyone that needs it,” Tim Worley, managing director of the Community Water Systems Alliance, told CalMatters.

Hexavalent chromium was made infamous by the movie “Erin Brockovich,” which dramatized Pacific Gas & Electric’s contaminat­ion of the water supply of a small California desert town. PG&E paid a $333 million settlement to about 600 Hinkley residents in 1996 who claimed they suffered high rates of cancer and other diseases.

Levels above the new state limit have been reported in about 330 sources of water supplies in California. Some of the areas affected are the counties of Sacramento, Solano, Santa Cruz, San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Monterey and Merced. The highest levels found were in Riverside, Yolo, Los Angeles and Ventura counties, although water suppliers may blend or treat the water to reduce the contaminan­ts there.

Central Coast resident Ana Maria Perez told the board that her community suffers from elevated levels of hexavalent chromium, nitrates and other contaminan­ts.

“I’m here because the State Water Board has again failed us,” she said through an interprete­r.

“It’s not fair that many people have to get sick and even die because the State Water Board has not done their job well.”

The largest water suppliers will have two years to comply; smaller ones with fewer than 1,000 connection­s will have four years. Many water suppliers said permitting, financing and constructi­on timelines would make it difficult to meet these deadlines, and urged the state for more flexibilit­y.

“It’s untenable for some of those communitie­s,” said Andrea Abergel, manager of water policy for the California Municipal Utilities Associatio­n.

The new standard is one of the least protective of all the water contaminan­ts regulated by California, according to a state analysis.

Public health advocates had urged a more stringent standard because the one set is 500 times higher than the level that state scientists deemed a negligible, one-in-a-million cancer risk. Under the new standard, for every 2,000 people who drink the water for a lifetime, one person would be at risk of cancer.

“Personally, I think we should go lower,” said water board member Laurel Firestone. She voted for it anyway but wants to revisit it when the standard is reviewed in five years.

Max Costa, professor and chair of environmen­tal medicine at NYU School of Medicine, was an expert witness for residents in the Brockovich case. When California regulators first unveiled the proposed limit, he said “it’s not terrible, but it’s not acceptable…The most acceptable level is none.”

Some hexavalent chromium occurs naturally in California’s rocks and soils; some seeps into the environmen­t from industries that work with chrome, such as metalplati­ng, stainless steel production and wood preservati­on.

California’s new standard is “expected to protect an estimated 5.5 million people… from potential illness due to hexavalent chromium,” according to a water board report.

California until now limited hexavalent chromium under a combined standard of 50 parts per billion for all types of chromium, including a more benign type called trivalent chromium.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency doesn’t have a hexavalent chromium standard for drinking water. Instead, more than 30 years ago, it set a national standard for total chromium at 100 parts per billion, or 10 times higher than the California one for hexavalent chromium. In response to studies linking it to cancer, the EPA is now conducting a human health risk assessment for the contaminan­t.

A decade ago, California regulators tried to enact the same limit for hexavalent chromium but the regulation was overturned in court because it “failed to properly consider the economic feasibilit­y of complying.”

California regulators said their analysis now supports the feasibilit­y because of the low per-person costs for most people and “because there are sufficient resources available.” They added, though, that they can’t guarantee state funding to assist water suppliers.

“Those same dollars are spoken for time and time again,” water board member Sean Maguire said at the hearing today. “Which is why we have so many folks who still are struggling meeting even the current standards that we have today.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States