Las Vegas Review-Journal

Agency probes contaminat­ed water by base

- By Anita Snow

PHOENIX — The Arizona agency that regulates utilities is calling together water companies near Luke Air Force Base in metro Phoenix, where drinking water was found to be contaminat­ed with chemicals commonly found in firefighti­ng foam.

The Arizona Corporatio­n Commission was holding an emergency open meeting Wednesday afternoon to discuss the recent discovery of the chemicals — which prompted the U.S. Air Force to start distributi­ng bottled water to thousands of residents and business owners.

Commission­er Anna Tovar encouraged affected residents to join the online meeting.

“I want to make sure the residents and businesses near the base can trust the water coming out of their taps,” Tovar said before the meeting.

Luke Air Force Base said in February that studies showed high levels of contaminan­ts had affected drinking water for about 6,000 people in roughly 1,600 homes plus several neighborin­g businesses.

The base has recommende­d that people in the affected area use bottled water for drinking and cooking but deemed tap water safe for bathing and laundry.

In the meantime, a contractor is delivering drinking water to homes until a long-term filtration facility can be set up in April, a base spokesman said last week.

Similar contaminat­ion tied to the use of firefighti­ng foam has been found in water supplies near dozens of U.S. military sites, triggering hundreds of lawsuits.

Growing evidence that it is dangerous to be exposed to the chemicals found in the foam has prompted the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency to consider setting a maximum level for them in drinking water.

But they aren’t regulated now, meaning the base cannot be punished, even though the EPA says the chemicals stay in the body for long periods and may cause adverse health effects.

The Arizona Department of Environmen­tal Quality has said it is working with the base, regulators and federal and local officials to ensure healthy drinking water for residents.

A statement from Luke Air Force Base last month said testing had detected levels of perfluoroo­ctanoic acid and perfluoroo­ctane sulfonate above the EPA’S health advisory for how much should be consumed in drinking water over a person’s lifetime.

The so-called forever chemicals from a class known as PFAS were found during tests of water from Valley Utilities Water Co.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States