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Maine went all-in on the state’s PFAS problem 5 years ago. What can Wisconsin learn?

Photo Credit: Robert F. Bukaty/AP Photo - Dairy cows rest outside the home of Fred and Laura Stone at Stoneridge Farm, Thursday Aug. 15, 2019, in Arundel, Maine. The Stones discovered PFAS in their milk supply in 2016 and have been advocating for state resources to support farmers and resients with PFAS remediation. Environmental journalist Marina Schauffler tells the story in her new book, “Inescapable: Facing Up to Forever Chemicals.”

Read the full article by Richelle Wilson (WPR).

“After years of back-and-forth over how to spend funding to address PFAS contamination, the state recently released $133 million to help communities in Wisconsin deal with widespread pollution of these ‘forever chemicals.’

The funding will help with PFAS testing and remediation efforts around the state, including money for new wells and a provision to protect ‘innocent landowners’ who have pollution on their property through no fault of their own.

The state of Maine has been down this path. In 2021, lawmakers there passed a suite of legislation aimed at fixing the state’s own PFAS crisis — spurred in part by wastewater sludge spread on farm fields — and invested more than $200 million into the effort.

Where does Maine’s PFAS problem stand now, five years later? That’s the topic of ‘Inescapable: Facing Up to Forever Chemicals,’ a new book from environmental journalist Marina Schauffler.”…

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