The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

New Yorkers await toxic chemical testing

- By Marina Villeneuve Associated Press

It’s unclear just when New York will move ahead with ambitious plans that were announced last year to test public water systems for three industrial chemicals.

State regulators have been working to require public water systems to test for and clean up three contaminan­ts linked with long-term health risks such as severe kidney and liver damage.

New York is poised to join a handful of Northeast states that — frustrated with a lack of federal standards — are moving forward with their own drinking water limits for industrial chemicals found in paint strippers, stain resistant clothing, nonstick products and firefighti­ng foams. New York would become the first state to set a limit for 1,4-dioxane, a synthetic chemical found in inks, adhesives and household products such as shampoos that’s considered likely to cause cancer in humans.

The state’s largest water suppliers have already begun testing and treating their water for the chemicals. But it’s unclear just when all New Yorkers will know whether their drinking water has elevated levels of such pollutants.

That leaves customers of smaller systems in the dark in a state still facing the legacy of water pollution crises in upstate communitie­s including Hoosick Falls and Newburgh.

“Health has to come first, the money, the budgets, all of that can get worked out,” Loreen Hackett, a resident of Hoosick Falls, told regulators at a recent Drinking Water Quality Council meeting. WHAT’S THE HOLD UP? Environmen­tal groups are calling on health officials to act swiftly so the public can know whether they’re drinking water is safe. They say while New York has dragged its feet, other states including Michigan are proposing stricter rules for more industrial chemicals.

“When you know that human lives are on the line, we can’t understand why it’s taken so long,” said Maureen Cunningham, of the Environmen­tal Advocates of New York. She said officials have also failed to come up with a list of more emerging contaminan­ts called for in a 2017 law.

But water suppliers worried about being held liable for contaminat­ed water have threatened to shut down wells, impose water restrictio­ns or prevent new customers from hooking up. Suppli

ers, particular­ly in areas of Long Island already known to have high levels of industrial contaminan­ts, have called for a delay of three years to install treatment systems expected to cost $1.4 billion to install.

“Water suppliers have been clear that they will not supply water that doesn’t meet all drinking water regulation­s,” said Stanley Carey, superinten­dent at Massapequa Water District and member of New York’s Drinking Water Quality Council. “They just will not do that. If that means drastic conservati­on measures. If that means no new water hookups.”

Agency officials rejected an effort by water suppliers to delay roll-out at a state Drinking Water Quality Council meeting last month, and said they’ll work with water suppliers on a case-by-case basis to come up with plans to ensure compliance. But officials said they’re still going through over 4,000 public comments from residents, water suppliers, environmen­tal and public health groups and chemical companies.

Officials hope to hold another public meeting in December and the state could roll-out the limits as early as March, according to Brad Hutton, deputy commission­er for New York’s Office of Public Health. But that could change if regulators tweak their plans on public comments, he added.

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WILL POLLUTERS PAY UP?

Chemical companies and manufactur­ers, meanwhile, are lobbying state health officials and facing lawsuits from Long Island municipali­ties that demand clean up money from polluters.

State lobbying reports show Dow Chemical Company,

Ferro Corporatio­n and Vulcan Materials Company have reported spending $125,000 this year to lobby New York’s health and environmen­tal agencies and lawmakers on the proposed 1,4-dioxane regulation­s and legislatio­n helping public authoritie­s sue polluters.

Dow Chemical Company is a major manufactur­er of 1,4-dioxane but a spokeswoma­n said the company hasn’t manufactur­ed or disposed the chemical on Long Island. Vulcan Materials Company declined comment, while Ferro Corporatio­n didn’t respond to request for comment.

“Like thousands of others, Dow provided public comments to the state of New York,” the company said in a statement. “The comments were submitted jointly with other similarly situated companies and demonstrat­e that the proposed maximum contaminan­t level for dioxane was the result of a flawed process and is not based on the best and most recent science.”

The EPA classifies 1,4-dioxane as likely cancer-causing, a warning echoed by the Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer. A handful of Long Island municipali­ties are piloting new technology to remove the hard-to-clean-up contaminan­t.

Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, meanwhile, recently signed a law that helps public water authoritie­s file lawsuits against polluters. The state’s also offering $350 million in grants to help communitie­s combat contaminan­ts and flooding.

Carey, of the Massapequa Water District, said money’s a concern but water districts will figure out how to fund needed technology — whether through borrowing money, receiving grants or going after polluters.

Such infrastruc­ture costs are expected to top $40 billion over the next two decades, he added.

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