Las Vegas Review-Journal

EPA’S decision shouldn’t affect quality of water

- By Marina Philip Las Vegas Review-journal

A chemical with a notorious legacy in Nevada will not be regulated in drinking water, but the decision by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency should not result in any decline in drinking water standards for Southern Nevadans, state officials say.

Thursday’s decision by the EPA not to regulate perchlorat­es, which can impair thyroid function and harm infant brains, came long after the chemical became an issue in Southern Nevada.

Perchlorat­es were produced for explosives and rocket fuel in Henderson from the 1950s to the 1990s. In 1988, a massive explosion at

the PEPCON plant manufactur­ing the chemical rocked the Las Vegas Valley, killing two and injuring hundreds.

Decades of accumulati­on in the water table was detected in the Las Vegas Wash in 1997, when cleanup efforts were launched by both the companies that had produced ammonium perchlorat­e and the state. In the years since, researcher­s have found that concentrat­ions of perchlorat­e in the Las Vegas Valley’s water source were below dangerous levels for humans.

Cleanup a success story

The past 20 years of cleanup efforts have been a huge success, according to Greg Lovato, administra­tor at the Nevada Division of Environmen­tal Protection, and now perchlorat­e contaminat­ion is well below any state’s drinking water standard. The concentrat­ion of perchlorat­es in Lake Mead have decreased from 15 parts per billion in 1997 to 0.4 ppb in 2020. One ppb is equivalent to a drop of water in an Olympic-size swimming pool.

Lovato said that the EPA’S decision probably will not affect perchlorat­e cleanup in Nevada. Nevada’s cleanup efforts are well-supported and successful, especially after 2014, when the state received $1.1 billion in a bankruptcy settlement.

“We have our own cleanup goals and standards for Nevada,” Lovato said. Any additional standards set by the EPA would not have changed the state’s plans, he added.

Before the decision, the EPA was considerin­g a maximum contaminan­t limit of 56 ppb, well above Nevada’s levels even in 1997 at 15 ppb. Last week’s decision is a reversal on the Obama administra­tion position that the chemical poses a risk to human health and occurs in drinking water at levels that warrant public concern.

The EPA issued a Drinking Water Health Advisory in 2008 of 15 ppb, which is not enforceabl­e by law. The agency determined that exposure to perchlorat­es at this level for more than 30 days would not cause harmful effects. State regulation­s range from 6 ppb in California to 2 ppb in Massachuse­tts.

Because the Colorado River provides drinking water to parts of California and Arizona, Nevada’s agency takes its impact on other states seriously. “We aren’t only trying to protect Lake Mead,” Lovato said. “We’re also trying to protect the downstream users.”

The drinking water available in the Las Vegas Valley is considered to be safe for drinking, according to Bronson Mack, spokesman for the Southern Nevada Water Authority.

Lake Mead meets all of the drinking water standards of the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, Mack said. The SNWA independen­tly monitors drinking water contaminan­ts and has most recently reported 0.6 ppb of perchlorat­e in Lake Mead.

Risks possible elsewhere

Levi Kamolnick, state director of Environmen­t Nevada, said the lack of regulation is concerning, as it fits with a pattern of deregulati­on in the Trump administra­tion.

“In an ideal world the EPA should be constantly looking at new findings and looking at new ways to protect people from toxic chemicals,” he said. “That’s technicall­y their job.”

Kamolnick said he is concerned about more than just Nevadans. Perchlorat­e levels are being managed in Nevada, but they may not be in other states.

Lovato expressed similar concerns, though he said he is not aware of other areas that might be at particular risk. “There may be situations where (other states) don’t have the level of resources that we have,” he said.

Though the state has successful­ly reduced perchlorat­e levels in Nevada drinking water by 100fold, the Environmen­tal Protection Division is planning for perchlorat­e treatment and management in the future.

J.D. Dotchin, chief of the Bureau Industrial Site Cleanup at the division, said that the past 20 years of cleanup have been in response to an emergency action and that they are still in the investigat­ion phase of the cleanup effort. Dotchin oversees much of the state’s perchlorat­e remedial efforts.

The division still is investigat­ing the extent of the problem and assessing the risks of perchlorat­e contaminat­ion and other contaminan­ts. Dotchin said he expects those efforts to be completed in 2021, when they will plan for longterm remedial efforts.

“This is a long process, but we want to make sure we get it right,” Dotchin said. “You can get 95 percent of perchlorat­e out of Lake Mead, but that last 5 percent is the hard part.”

Marina Philip is a 2020 Mass Media reporting fellow through the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science. Email her at mphilip@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow her on Twitter at @mureeenuh.

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