The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Suits allege Dalton tainted water with ‘forever chemicals.’

- By Drew Kann

A Georgia utility facing lawsuits for allegedly pol- luting the main drinking water supply for communitie­s downstream will receive federal funds to test methods for removing so-called “for- ever chemicals” from wastewater it receives to treat.

Dalton Utilities — which provides gas, electric and water service for the city of Dalton and several counties in the heart of the state’s flooring industry — will get just over $1.5 million in grant money to conduct its pilot study, set to run through October 2026.

The funding comes from the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law signed by President Biden in 2021, which earmarked $1 billion for states to clean up “emerging con- taminants” such as forever chemicals in their waterways. Dalton Utilities is receiving all of the money allocated to Georgia by the law for fiscal year 2023.

Forever chemicals, also known as PFAS — short for polyfluoro­alkyl and perfluoroa­lkyl substances — have been used foryears in a range of everydaypr­oducts, from nonstick pans and clothing to carpets and food wrappers.

The chemicals’ name comes from theirresis­tance to heat, water and oils, mak- ing them difficult to remove once they enter the environmen­t. PFAS have been linked to a number of serious health conditions, including cancers, immune system suppressio­n, high cholestero­l and stunted infant and fetal growth.

Dalton Utilities receives wastewater from residentia­l and industrial customers, as well as flooring manufactur­ing facilities in the region. The carpet industry has used PFAS chemi- cals for years to add waterand stain-resistance to its products.

Lawsuits filed by the city of Rome and a resident claim that Dalton Utilities’ cur- rent wastewater treatment methods do not remove PFAS chemicals. They also allege that a vast sprinkler system the utility uses to spray treated wastewater on the land has fouled rivers that supply drinking water to Rome and other cities downstream.

The city of Rome is build- ing a new, $ 100 m illi on reverse-osmosis water treatment plant to remove PFAS from its drinking water and has raised residents’ water bills to cover the cost. Rome is seeking to hold Dalton Util- ities, plus several chemical and flooring manufactur­ers, responsibl­e for paying for the plant, plus other damages.

According to a proposal submitted to Georgia envi- ronmental regulators, Dal- ton Utilities’ study will test five Pfas-removal technologi­es and three techniques for destroying the chemi- cals once they’re separated from water.

Dalton Utilities’ spokes- woman Kay Phillips declined to answer several questions about why it is conducting the pilot, citing the ongoing litigation.

However, its proposal said the size of Dalton Utilities’ treatment facility and the potential for PFAS contaminan­ts in wastewater made it an “ideal candidate” for the study.

The utility added that if it proves successful, the pilot could deliver a “positive impact to a sizeable watershed.”

The utility made no mention of the lawsuits against it, stating only that it operates an “award-winning wastewater treatment operation.”

Officials with the Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division (EPD), which reviewed the utility’s plans, and the Georgia Environmen­tal Finance Authority (GEFA), which awarded the funds, did not immediatel­y respond to a question about the utility’s eligibilit­y for funding in light of the lawsuits.

An EPD assessment of the project says the testing will not “have a significan­t effect on the quality of the human environmen­t.”

The grant funding comes amid a push by the Biden administra­tion to address PFAS pollution around the country.

In the coming weeks, the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) is expected to propose highly anticipate­d, new drinking-water standards for perfluoroo­ctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) and perfluoroo­ctanoic acid (PFOA), two “forever chemicals” linked to a hostofheal­th conditions. Manufactur­ers have stopped using the two chemicals, but their resistance to breakdown in nature means they can remain in the environmen­t for decades.

The federal government is also giving billions of dollars to states to remove PFAS from drinking water.

Last mo nt h, the EPA announced Georgia would receive over $54 million to clean up drinking water in communitie­s whose supplies are tainted by forever chemicals.

The recipients of that funding have not been announced yet.

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