Santa Fe New Mexican

Dairy concerned about Air Force pollution

- Associated Press

CLOVIS — An Eastern New Mexico dairy has lost tens of thousands of gallons of milk daily since the U.S. Air Force announced that water in the area was contaminat­ed with chemicals associated with past military firefighti­ng activities.

Manager Ryan Schaap tells the Eastern New Mexico News that the cows at Highland Dairy need to be milked, but nobody will buy their wares, imperiling the dairy and its 40 employees.

Chemicals associated with firefighti­ng foam once used at Cannon Air Force Base near Clovis have been detected in groundwate­r on and near the military installati­on, prompting requests by state officials for more tests and a study to determine the extent of the toxic plume.

Per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, or PFAS, have been detected in some off-base wells. Sampling by the Air Force shows contaminat­ion beyond the base ranges from less than half of the federal advisory level to more than 20 times the level.

The Air Force is making bottled water available for drinking and cooking for residents who rely on wells that exceed the health advisory level set by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Schaap’s business is among those affected. He said water at the dairy and farm were found to be 35 and 200 times the EPA limit, respective­ly. Water at his parents’ home tested 10 times the limit.

A scientist with the New Mexico Environmen­t Department explained at a recent town hall in Clovis that the chemicals can accumulate, making their way from water into crops, livestock and other products. A standard for those chemicals’ hazards in food and animals hasn’t been establishe­d in the same way it has for drinking water, and officials have said more research is needed.

The state Agricultur­e Department has requested that the Food and Drug Administra­tion establish a standard for addressing the chemicals’ concentrat­ions in milk or other foods.

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