Wednesday, July 23, 2025 - People who live in mobile home parks all across the US are more likely to get PFAS in their drinking water since many of these communities get their water from sources that aren't fully regulated or aren't monitored at all. Mobile home parks, especially those in rural and low-income areas, sometimes get their water from private wells or tiny municipal water systems that the Safe Drinking Water Act doesn't fully cover. These systems might give people water with harmful amounts of PFAS--per-- and polyfluoroalkyl substances--without them even knowing it, because there are no rules on testing or treatment. These man-made compounds, which are found in firefighting foam and industrial items, have been connected to a number of health problems, such as cancer, thyroid illness, and a weakened immune system. A PFAS water contamination attorney said that more and more legal claims are happening in places that used to be ignored. PFAS water contamination lawsuits might also include private landlords and park owners who didn't test or tell renters about possible health hazards.
A new report from the U.S. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) says that some 45 million Americans get their water from private or small community systems that the federal government doesn't fully regulate. A lot of these systems are used in mobile home parks, where the infrastructure could be old or not well cared after. Municipal systems have to test for pollutants according to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) guidelines. Smaller systems, on the other hand, can go years without testing for PFAS or other chemicals unless something bad happens that makes them do it. Recent tests done by independent groups in several states have shown that PFAS levels in water sources in mobile home parks are much higher than the EPA's latest suggested safety limit. Families often keep using dirty water for cooking, bathing, and drinking even when there isn't any official testing. Some towns only find out about the pollution when people start becoming sick in strange ways, which makes environmental groups step in and demand action. The PFAS water cases that came out of this are meant to do more than just pay victims. They also want to make it harder for small water systems that serve disadvantaged groups to get away with bad testing.
The way that mobile home parks are owned makes things even more complicated. Residents often don't own the land or water system, which means they don't have much legal power to ask for safety improvements. Some park owners try to get out of their responsibilities by saying they didn't know about the risks of PFAS or didn't have the money to test for them. But legal experts think that the defense is getting weaker as more people learn about the case and the government's advice becomes evident. Lawyers for people who live in mobile homes are increasingly going after both property owners and upstream PFAS emitters, like chemical suppliers and manufacturers.
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