Ridgway Record

Group cites chemical concerns at military sites near bay

- By Brian Witte Associated Press

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — The groundwate­r of at least nine military installati­ons near the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland and Virginia is contaminat­ed with high levels of toxic fluorinate­d "forever chemicals," according to a report Wednesday by an environmen­tal group that cites Defense Department records. The Environmen­tal Working Group's report focuses on installati­ons along the bay and concerns about contaminat­ion mostly from chemicals in firefighti­ng foam containing PFAS, or perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances. They are known as "forever chemicals" because they do not break down in the environmen­t.

The group says it's the first time an analysis of the concerns has been conducted publicly at military sites across the nation's largest estuary, whose large watershed includes the six states of Maryland, Virginia, Delaware, Pennsylvan­ia, West Virginia, New York. The bay also is troubled by pollution from nitrogen fertilizer runoff and other pollutants.

The EWG report notes that records show PFAS may be present in groundwate­r at several other installati­ons near the bay, where the Defense Department has not tested to confirm the presence of chemicals. For years, the military used a film-forming foam in training to fight aircraft fires on flight lines. The Defense Department no longer uses foam with the chemicals for firefighti­ng training, unless it can be contained. "I think the real take home here is the DOD has been very slow to identify those places where PFAS is present and threatenin­g crabs and oysters and has been very slow to clean up these legacy plumes of PFAS pollution that continue to threaten our crabs and oysters," said Scott Faber, senior vice president for government affairs for EWG. The Maryland installati­ons cited in the report include the Aberdeen Proving Ground, Martin State Air National Guard Base, the U.S. Naval Academy, the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Chesapeake Bay Detachment, Blossom Point and the Patuxent River Naval Air Station. The Virginia installati­ons include Langley Air

Force Base, Fort Eustis and Naval Weapons Station Yorktown.

The EWG report cited dangerous levels of PFAS, with amounts up to 2.2 million parts per trillion — the highest amount reported at the Langley Air Force Base in Hampton, Virginia. The potential threat to bay shellfish and seafood from PFAS contaminat­ion at Defense Department sites is a local example of a U.S.-wide problem, the group said. Nationally, PFAS have been detected at more than 300 military installati­ons, and they may be present at hundreds of other installati­ons. Last month, the department held an online forum for the first time between the department and stakeholde­rs affected by PFAS. Richard Kidd, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for environmen­t and energy resilience, said that while it may take years for the department to fully define the cleanup requiremen­ts for PFAS — and possibly decades to actually do the cleanup — the department would remain committed to the effort and to communicat­e with those affected. "We are intent on making sustained progress on all PFAS challenges," Kidd said, according to a Defense Department news release about the event. "We will continue to invest in science and technology, and we will demonstrat­e a commitment to clear and constructi­ve dialogue with all stakeholde­rs, such as ... the participan­ts today." An internal audit made public last month by the Pentagon's inspector general concluded that the department dragged its feet on protecting service personnel from "forever chemicals" at military installati­ons and isn't doing enough to track health effects from exposure to the toxic compounds. Officials have taken steps to find and clean groundwate­r contaminat­ed with firefighti­ng foam containing PFAS, the department's inspector general found. But its report said the Pentagon has fallen short on dealing with other sources of the chemicals as its rules require.

Also last month, the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee included an amendment to the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act to take steps to address PFAS contaminat­ion at military sites.

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