The EPA Undertests and Underreports Levels of PFAS Forever Chemicals In Drinking Water

Water Contamination Lawsuit News

The nation's water contamination crisis is likely orders of magnitude greater than what the EPA is willing to admit

Monday, August 1, 2022 - Reports are circulating of studies that have concluded the US Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) testing of water for the presence of PFAS forever chemicals may not be up to par and putting the health of the nation at risk. The EPA is being accused of failing to report thousands of toxic substances, many produced by industrial waste disposal. Scientific studies found that standard EPA tests used to uncover the presence of PFAS forever chemicals fell far short of reporting the thousands of toxic, potentially carcinogenic substances that lurk in the nation's drinking water. PFAS forever chemicals come from using and improperly disposing of certain products designed to make non-stick cookware, stain-resistant fabrics, and carpeting, and also to repel water like in Gortex waterproof clothing. Another significant source of toxic PFAS forever chemical is firefighting foam used on every military base, airport, and local firefighting station in the country. Also to be included on the list of those contributing to the nation's PFAS drinking water contamination crisis is industrial waste disposal. Major corporations base their main production facilities on the banks of rivers and have quietly pumped their waste into the deep rivers through underground pipelines undetected. New York's Hudson River hosts hundreds of major corporate production facilities on its banks such as IBM which had at one time three main production plants in Kingston, Poughkeepsie, and Fishkill. It is doubtful that the corporate decision to build a billion-dollar production facility on river banks is to take advantage of the view.

According to the Guardian, "Critics say when it comes to identifying PFAS-contaminated water, the limitations of the test used by state and federal regulators, which is called the EPA 537 method, virtually guarantees regulators will never have a full picture of contamination levels as industry churns out new compounds much faster than researchers can develop the science to measure them." According to Graham Peaslee, a University of Notre Dame researcher on the subject, current EPA PFAS forever chemical standard tests look at only 1% of the toxic substances in water and are useless since it can be assumed that all PFAS forever chemicals are toxic. All water supplies municipal and private wells, and filtered and unfiltered water tested by The Guardian found levels of PFAS forever chemicals hundreds of times greater than the level of one part per trillion that is generally believed to be a safe limit. The EPA falsely assumes that if a chemical is not covered by their tests that it must be safe. Ingesting PFAS forever chemicals in the local drinking water can be the source of developing many types of illnesses like cancer and insidious birth defects, miscarriages, stillbirths, and death at an early age from childhood leukemia. If you or a loved one have developed testicular cancer, kidney cancer, liver cancer or pancreatic cancer at an early age with no history of cancer in the family, as a result of drinking tap water, you may qualify to file a water contamination cancer lawsuit against the federal government for reimbursement of medical expenses, lost wages and pain and suffering.

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