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70 million Americans drink water from systems reporting PFAS to EPA. Is yours on our map?

Photo credit: City of Sacramento Department of Utilities - The Shasta Groundwater Treatment Facility is the largest groundwater treatment facility in Sacramento, California. The facility can produce up to 4 million gallons of drinking water water per day.

Read the full article by Austin Fast, Cecilia Garzella, and Yoonserk Pyun (USA Today)

“At least 70 million Americans get their water from a system where toxic PFAS ‘forever chemicals’ were found at levels that require reporting to the Environmental Protection Agency. 

That’s according to new data the EPA released in its ongoing 5-year review of water systems across the nation. The number will almost certainly grow as new reports are released every three months. 

PFAS, or per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substances, are nearly indestructible chemicals widely used across industries for decades. Found in drinking water, food, firefighting foam, and nonstick and water-repellent items, PFAS resist degradation, building up in both the environment and our bodies. 

Salt Lake City; Sacramento, California; Madison, Wisconsin; and Louisville, Kentucky, were among the major systems reporting PFAS contamination to the EPA in the latest data release.”

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