Cleanup of PFAS Could Cost Wisconsin Billions
But DNR and GOP legislators need to compromise to create clear standards.

A sign at Marinette High School warns of PFAS contamination in water that runs through the school’s campus Thursday, May 20, 2021. Angela Major/WPR
Wisconsin environmental regulators and Republican lawmakers don’t agree on much when it comes to addressing PFAS contamination, but both acknowledge it will likely cost the state billions of dollars.
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources produced a fiscal estimate this fall on one of two PFAS bills introduced by Republicans. The agency’s estimate focused on potential costs of legislation that would exempt individuals and other parties from paying to clean up contamination they didn’t cause under the state’s spills law.
The bill includes exemptions for fire departments, public airports or municipalities that used firefighting foam containing the chemicals for emergencies or training, as well as solid waste disposal facilities. That means the DNR would likely be on the hook for cleanup costs.
The DNR warned the increased cost to taxpayers would be “on the order of billions of dollars” to upgrade public and private water supplies to protect public health. State Sen. Eric Wimberger, R-Oconto, said without his bill those costs would be borne by innocent landowners.
“I fully anticipate that monitoring and upgrading systems will be several billion dollars over the course of multiple budget cycles,” Wimberger said.

Wisconsin state Sen. Eric Wimberger, R-Green Bay, is photographed during a state Senate session on June 28, 2023, in the Wisconsin State Capitol building in Madison, Wis. Drake White-Bergey/Wisconsin Watch
PFAS is an expensive problem
In its fiscal estimate, the DNR focused on known costs to cleaning up PFAS, a class of thousands of synthetic chemicals that don’t break down easily in the environment and have been linked to serious health problems.
The figures don’t include other costs tied to wastewater sampling and site investigations and cleanups.
The estimate represents a worst-case scenario if the state had to test or replace every well, said David Strifling, director of the Water Law and Policy Initiative at Marquette University Law School. He said it’s difficult to assess potential costs when it’s unknown whether a harmful release of PFAS resulted from a polluter or one of the parties that would be exempt under the bill.
“There’s just so much we don’t know here (and) it’s really difficult to come up with an exact number,” Strifling said.
Meleesa Johnson, executive director of Wisconsin’s Green Fire, said without clear PFAS standards, it’s difficult to estimate the bill’s costs. She likened it to seeking an estimate for building a home without knowing its size or dimensions.
“At a minimum, we need groundwater standards, and we need cleanup standards,” Johnson said.

Firefighting foam can be seen in a ditch nearby the Husky oil refinery in Superior the morning after a series of fires and explosion on April 26, 2018. Concerns have grown over the use of firefighting foam that can contain so-called “forever chemicals” known as PFAS. Danielle Kaeding/WPR
Wimberger said quick state action is needed to address PFAS contamination. The state’s rulemaking process can take years. The GOP lawmaker added the Legislature would likely provide additional funds to address PFAS over time.
Wimberger said he’s encouraged by discussions with DNR Secretary Karen Hyun that the state is heading in the right direction on PFAS legislation to make sure that the law “doesn’t wrap up all these people … that you wouldn’t want to hold accountable.”
A DNR spokesperson said the agency and bill authors have had productive conversations “regarding narrow exemptions to the spills law to protect innocent landowners and provide much-needed funding to communities impacted by PFAS contamination.”
Cleanup of PFAS could cost Wisconsin billions, regulators and lawmakers say was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.
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More about the PFAS Problem
- Cleanup of PFAS Could Cost Wisconsin Billions - Danielle Kaeding - Nov 13th, 2025
- Cleanup PFAS Without Penalizing Innocent Landowners - Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce - Nov 4th, 2025
- Wisconsin Lawmakers, DNR Clash Over PFAS Protections in GOP Bills - Danielle Kaeding - Oct 8th, 2025
- Wisconsin Moves to Bring PFAS Limits In Line with Contested Federal Standards - Danielle Kaeding - Oct 3rd, 2025
- DNR Names Companies Responsible for PFAS Contamination In Northern Wisconsin Community - Danielle Kaeding - Sep 30th, 2025
- Green Bay Area Ducks Contaminated with ‘Forever Chemicals’ - Isiah Holmes - Sep 8th, 2025
- DNR and DHS Issue New PFAS-based Consumption Advisory for Ducks Harvested on Green Bay - Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources - Sep 4th, 2025
- DNR and DHS Issue New PFAS-based Consumption Advisories for Fish and Deer Near town of Stella and Surrounding Waterbodies in Oneida County - Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources - Sep 4th, 2025
- Groundwater Coordinating Council Releases 2025 Report to the Legislature - Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources - Sep 2nd, 2025
- Environmental Groups, Community Advocates Push for PFAS Deal - Henry Redman - Jul 14th, 2025
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