Read full article by Ben Meyer (WXPR)
“The DNR admitted putting new rules on PFAS in groundwater, drinking water, and surface water will have a ‘significant’ economic impact on the state.
DNR staff also listened to the public, environmentalists, and industry groups at a hearing over a proposed PFAS regulation scope statement last week.
Wisconsin is in the early steps of regulating PFAS, a family of chemicals with health hazards.
Meghan Williams, an environmental toxicologist with the DNR’s Water Quality Bureau, said PFAS regulation in wastewater, for example, wouldn’t be cheap.
‘There are certain treatments that are pretty good at removing PFAS from wastewater, but there are costs that are associated with all of those treatments. We are expecting there to be significant economic impacts,’ Williams said.
The same is true for drinking water treatment.
‘Treatment for PFAS contaminants at some of your larger drinking water systems can range in the $25 million range for the initial installation of a treatment plant,’ said Adam DeWeese, chief of the DNR’s Public Water Supply Section.
But environmentalists indicated it’s worth it.
‘They are harmful “forever chemicals” that build up in the body and the environment over time. PFAS have serious known health effects and are already contaminating Wisconsin’s waterways,’ said Clean Wisconsin Director of Government Relations Carly Michiels.
‘Wisconsinites face enough barriers to clean water. PFAS shouldn’t continue to be another barrier,’ added Casey Hicks, a citizen testifying from Green Bay. ‘We can’t wait for a federal rulemaking process that will take between eight to ten years from the EPA. The DNR really needs to be a leader in setting strong standards as soon as possible’…
The Natural Resources Board will next consider the proposed scope statements this winter.
If approved, PFAS rule drafting and review will happen in 2020 and 2021, and the rules will take effect in 2022.”