The Clean Water Act Failed To Protect People From PFAS Forever Chemicals In Americas Waterways

Water Contamination Lawsuit News

Most American waterways are polluted with PFAS forever chemicals that could be causing cancer and other diseases

Tuesday, October 25, 2022 - A shocking and grim report by E & N released the other day, marking the 50th anniversary of the Clean Water Act, tells readers that about 85% of the streams, rivers, and lakes in the United States are contaminated with toxic PFAS forever chemicals. According to EENews.net, "Of the 35 compounds detected during the analysis, the most persistent were PFOA and PFOS, the two most notorious members of the chemical family. Those substances are linked to kidney and liver diseases, cancer, and other health problems. They cropped up at 70 percent of testing sites observed by the waterkeepers." The types of PFAS forever chemicals that water tests discovered were of serious concern for public health and some are known carcinogens. There is little tolerance for PFAS in drinking water and tests revealed levels of toxins in the thousands of parts per trillion, high enough to cause cancer or other diseases. Polluters include industrial manufacturing facilities, military bases, and municipal firefighting stations. PFAS forever chemicals were manufactured by 3M, DuPont, and other companies that lawmakers allege failed to warn the public about the dangers to human health. People who drink local tap water contaminated with PFAS forever chemicals are filing PFAS cancer lawsuits against firefighting foam manufacturers, and other companies. PFAS forever chemicals can be found in Teflon non-stick cookware, Gortex waterproof rain ware, Scotch Gard fabric and upholstery stain repellant, and elsewhere in addition to the run-off from firefighting foam. Fast food packaging and food containers also contain PFAS forever chemicals.

Lawmakers are concerned that scientists are unable to keep up with the advances in chemicals and that society is unable to regulate the health of the environment as evidenced by the failure of the Clean Water Act. "The Clean Water Act was put into place to supposedly protect us from pollution like this," said Jill Jedlicka, executive director for the Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper. But, she continued, "a new generation of emerging contaminants" is testing the ability of regulators to protect the public. "PFAS are in our water, our air, our food, our blood," she said. "Yet we still don't have federal standards in place." EEN wrote. Attorney Generals and municipal leaders are seeking answers from the makers of products that contain firefighting foam. Several PFAS water lawsuits filed by state governments seek billions of dollars in compensation to remediate and clean up the nation's waterways. PFAS contaminates have strong molecular bonds and accumulate in the body and eventually cause cancer. Shockingly, toxic levels of PFAS chemicals have been found in the umbilical cord blood of virtually every newborn baby tested. PFAS forever chemicals were also found in the breastmilk of nursing mothers. The CDC tells Americans that the health effects of drinking PFAS contaminated water include, "increased cholesterol levels, decreased vaccine response in children, changes in liver enzymes, increased risk of high blood pressure or pre-eclampsia in pregnant women, small decreases in infant birth weights, and an increased risk of kidney or testicular cancer.

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