The Arizona Republic

State to help Globe deal with tainted water

Chemicals found in wells at 2 mobile home parks

- Clara Migoya Clara Migoya covers agricultur­e and water issues for The Arizona Republic and azcentral. Send tips or questions to clara.migoya@arizonarep­ublic.com.

Two mobile home parks outside Globe’s city limits will be connected to the municipal water system due to concerns over PFAS water contaminat­ion.

The Arizona Department of Environmen­tal Quality detected some chemicals in private wells that supply residents in HAV Properties and August Hills. A partnershi­p between the agency and the city will help connect those residents to the city supply, which is PFASfree, said Globe City Manager Paul Jepson.

PFAS, short for perfluoroa­lkyl and polyfluoro­alkyl substances, are chemicals of increasing concern worldwide.

Industries have manufactur­ed and used PFAS chemicals in a wide variety of products for decades, and traces of them can now be found globally in water and soil. Many of them don’t break down easily and are difficult to get rid of, they’ve been dubbed “forever chemicals.”

Scientific evidence shows that longterm exposure to some of these chemicals can cause severe health issues that include cancer, developmen­tal effects and reproducti­ve disorders. Exposure to PFAS through drinking water is a main concern, but currently, there are no rules enforcing limits on public water systems.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency proposed limits for six kinds of PFAS in drinking water in March 2023. When approved, it would become the first regulatory standard for the chemicals.

Some agencies and public water systems are working proactivel­y to monitor and treat contaminat­ed water ahead of the ruling.

In Globe, ADEQ will oversee the project to design and build two more connection­s to the city system, Jepson said. The project will be funded from $5 million of state money that Gov. Katie Hobbs earmarked last year to identify, contain and treat PFAS in the state’s water sources.

“The city of Globe remains dedicated to providing a safe and adequate water supply to both city and nearby county residents and will continue to take the lead in water safety in partnershi­p with ADEQ,” Jepson added.

PFAS contaminat­ion in at least 70 water systems

Since 2023, the EPA has required water systems serving more than 3,300 people to screen for 29 different kinds of PFAS. Once the proposed rule is approved, it will also require them to notify water customers of the results and treat and reduce the levels of PFAS if they exceed the EPA limits. EPA is expected to finalize the rule in 2024.

Systems serving fewer than 3,300 people — 90% of all water systems in Arizona — are not covered by EPA’s monitoring rule.

ADEQ wanted to ensure that the halfmillio­n people served by those systems are aware of the safety and quality of their water. So, the agency began a statewide screening effort last year to sample over 1,200 water systems. The effort is 90% complete.

At least 82 water systems tested by ADEQ between 2018 and 2023 had a well with PFAS levels above the proposed EPA limit, public data analyzed by The Republic showed. Results of the tests are available online on the agency’s PFAS interactiv­e map.

Those systems would need to mitigate PFAS contaminat­ion once the rule is in effect. That could mean installing treatment plants, shutting or relocating wells, finding new water sources, or blending affected wells with other water sources to lower the level of contaminan­ts.

ADEQ received $42 million from the federal Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law for testing, treatment and infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts, and PFAS education.

The agency will “identify and prioritize small water systems and disadvanta­ged communitie­s with higher PFAS levels and the greatest need for assistance to provide them with technical and financial support,” said communicat­ions director Caroline Oppleman.

The agency has directed outreach on PFAS testing and mitigation to water providers and operators who will be subject to EPA’s rule. On Feb. 1, ADEQ will host an Arizona PFAS Forum for water system owners and operators, in collaborat­ion with the Arizona Water Associatio­n’s Water Treatment Committee.

Globe shuts one well, continues monitoring

The wells on HAV Properties/Palmer’s MHP and August Hills were tested on April 2023 for PFAS by ADEQ. Two PFAS chemicals were above the EPA’s proposed limits.

HAV Properties’ water had 4.42 parts per trillion of perfluoroo­ctanesulfo­nic acid, or PFOS. August Hills’ water had 2.6 ppt of PFOS and 5.28 ppt of perfluoroo­ctanoic acid, or PFOA.

Both chemicals have a proposed limit of 4 ppt. The ideal, health-based level is zero, according to the EPA.

Being exposed to these chemicals, even for a short period of time, can have adverse health effects, mounting scientific evidence suggests.

ADEQ began coordinati­ng with the city and the two mobile home parks’ public water systems in November 2023. A month later, the Globe City Council approved a plan to connect the mobile home parks to the municipal water system.

“If I had to do this on my own I couldn’t afford it, so it’s such a wonderful thing to be able to receive help,” said August Hills owner John Halliday. He acquired the property about two years ago and while working on improvemen­ts received notice about the PFAS results.

Until last year, he hadn’t heard about PFAS chemicals or the proposed EPA ruling, he said.

“I just know that there are some things that might be in the water that I want to keep from my tenants,” he added. He said the help from ADEQ and Globe was “a blessing for everybody on the (mobile home) park.”

Water systems monitor for nearly 100 chronic contaminan­ts, and PFAS chemicals are the latest addition.

Allan Palmer, owner of the HAV Properties mobile home park, said he posts all the water testing results on the bulletin board in the common laundry room. He recalls doing the same with PFAS test results.

He said he suspects that the use of fire retardant by Forest Service crews on nearby hills could be connected with the PFAS presence in well water.

Globe has been conducting PFAS testing on its own, as part of EPA’s mandatory fifth Unregulate­d Contaminan­t Monitoring Rule, for systems serving more than 3,300 people.

The city tested for PFAS in July and December 2023, Jepson said. One well, which was not in service at the time, had some PFAS levels above the limits advised by the EPA. Jepsen said the council decided to maintain that well offline indefinite­ly to protect water quality and consumer health.

Wells from the Pinto Valley Mine and one well owned by Freeport McMoran, tested by ADEQ, also had PFAS levels above the EPA proposed limit.

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