States can’t easily test for this compound because it’s not on the federally certified testing protocol (the EPA does not define TFA as a PFAS). While acknowledging that there are no safe levels of ...
Nearly 35 million people get their water from systems that reported high levels of PFAS in at least one test last year. Fixing the problem is costly.
Frustrated residents have asked the Navy to pay for public water extensions to homes near the Calverton facility.
The decision means the city still has a PFAS problem. Its sewage treatment plant is the only one in the state that accepts ...