Wisconsin Must Move Forward Now to Protect Families from “Forever Chemicals”
State on the verge of implementing PFAS regulations next year
This week the Biden Administration announced plans to combat PFAS pollution by taking action to develop a new national testing strategy, pursue drinking water regulations, and accelerate pollution cleanup.
The announcement comes after years of delay by the EPA to address PFAS contamination. The harmful chemicals were first produced in the 1940s and have been widely used in products like Teflon cookware, food wrappers, stain and water-resident clothing, and firefighting foam. PFAS have earned the nickname “forever chemicals” because they never break down in the environment.
PFAS are not regulated by the federal government or in the state of Wisconsin, but the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is working to change that. The agency has spent the last several years working to establish water quality standards that would help protect Wisconsinites from PFAS pollution. The first regulations in Wisconsin could go into effect next spring, but they must be approved by the legislature.
“Wisconsin families need legislative leaders to work together with the Governor to provide badly needed resources to the Department of Natural Resources and affected communities around Wisconsin to address PFAS pollution,” Laeser said. “It is time the legislature prioritizes people and public health rather than powerful industry interests standing in the way of meaningful action.”
PFAS chemicals have contaminated drinking water at dozens of sites across Wisconsin, forcing families to buy bottled water for drinking, cooking, even brushing their teeth. Laeser says addressing widespread contamination in our state will take aggressive action from every level of government.
“We need the Legislature to pass the CLEAR Act, a comprehensive bill to give the state the same tools EPA will deploy so they can work together to protect our water resources, and we need them to approve the drinking water standards the DNR is developing so the state can begin to clean up the PFAS pollution already out there and prevent more from occurring. The CLEAR Act has yet to receive a public hearing despite its introduction in the legislature nearly four months ago,” he said.
Even if new Federal Safe Drinking Water Act regulations are eventually established and put into effect, about a third of Wisconsinites will still be unprotected from PFAS in their water supplies. Many rural residents get their water from private wells, which are not covered under the Safe Drinking Water Act, so Laeser says it is imperative the state move forward with the proposed water quality standards to protect public health in rural communities.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
More about the PFAS Problem
- Wisconsin Supreme Court Hears Challenge to State Authority in PFAS Case - Danielle Kaeding - Jan 14th, 2025
- Legislature Will Try Again On Regulating Forever Chemical Contamination - Danielle Kaeding - Jan 3rd, 2025
- EPA Adds Nine Additional PFAS to the Toxics Release Inventory - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Jan 3rd, 2025
- Coalition of 30 Groups Calls for $953 Million Funding For Safe Drinking Water - Danielle Kaeding - Dec 24th, 2024
- Insurers Add PFAS Exclusions to Liability Policies - Danielle Kaeding - Dec 21st, 2024
- EPA Releases Draft Health-Based Recommendations for PFAS Levels in Bodies of Water - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Dec 19th, 2024
- EPA Launches New Studies and Data Collection Efforts to Better Protect Communities from PFAS - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Dec 16th, 2024
- More than 30 groups call on State Legislature to take action on safe drinking water for Safe Drinking Water Act 50th anniversary - Wisconsin Conservation Voters - Dec 5th, 2024
- EPA Launches New Initiative to Tackle PFAS, Identify Emerging Contaminants in Water - U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Nov 20th, 2024
- Environmental & Public Health Groups Urge Wisconsin Supreme Court to Reject Attempt by WMC to Undermine State’s Spills Law - Midwest Environmental Advocates - Nov 18th, 2024
Read more about PFAS Problem here
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