“Boulder County health officials say a private water well on Sugar Loaf Fire Protection District property has tested positive for elevated levels of Perfluorooctanoic Acid and Perfluorooctane Sulfonate, two chemicals commonly referred to as PFCs.
This marks the first confirmed PFC water contamination outside of El Paso County. There, health officials have linked the cases to a specific firefighting foam called aqueous film forming foam. It was once used at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs, which is believed to be the source of contamination for three drinking water districts. Right now Boulder County and state health officials suspect the well contamination is linked to foam used in the 1990s at the Sugar Loaf station. Fire officials confirmed that the station stopped using the foam in 1997.
‘This is definitely a different issue than what we saw in Colorado Springs,’ said Mike Van Dyke, chief of environmental epidemiology at Colorado’s Department of Public Health and Environment. ‘In Colorado Springs we had public water systems that were affected. In this [Boulder] area, what we have are private wells.’
Well water is overseen by the county. The state oversees public drinking water systems like the ones near Peterson AFB. Van Dyke also pointed out that the EPA health advisory levels for PFOA and PFOS are just guidelines right now, and technically aren’t regulated.
Sugar Loaf said it drilled the well near Fire Station 1 in March 2017 and voluntarily tested the water in April 2018. It found levels, particularly of PFOS, to be 10 times above the Environmental Protection Agency’s health advisory levels.
A second sample was submitted to confirm test results, which it expects to have soon.
Boulder County Environmental Health Division Manager Joseph Malinowski said the county notified nearby residents and is in the process of testing well water for PFCs at approximately 10 homes within 1,300 feet of the volunteer fire station.
‘At this time it’s difficult to say how far the plume may have spread. It may just be contained to the fire department’s property itself. That’s part of what we’re trying to do is doing water testing to see if we have some other contaminated wells nearby,’ Malinowski said.
Boulder County has advised the homeowners not to drink their well water until they see test results.”
Read the full article by Grace Hood