Ensuring that Americans have clean water has been an effort with strong bipartisan support for four decades. But not anymore.
December 11, 2011 | WASHINGTON, DC (ENS) --
This year, residents of Midland, Texas sued Dow Chemical for dangerous
levels of hexavalent chromium in their drinking water. Chromium-6 is a
cancer-causing chemical made infamous by Julia Roberts' film, "Erin
Brockovich." There are currently no drinking water standards for
chromium-6, and the chemical industry is delaying a new U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency assessment labeling it a potent
carcinogen.
This is far from an
isolated scenario, threats to the public drinking water supply are
national in scope. From the 1950s to the 1980s, trichloroethylene, a
carcinogenic metal degreaser, lurked, undetected, in the drinking water
at North Carolina's Fort Lejeune -- affecting up to one million marines
and their families.
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