Millions in the US Drink Dirty Water, Records Show
Published By:The New York Times (Link to Article) Published On: 2009-12-07 Author: CHARLES DUHIGG
More than 20 percent of the
nation’s water treatment systems have violated key provisions of the Safe
Drinking Water Act over the last five years, according to a New York Times
analysis of federal data.
That law requires communities to deliver safe tap water to local residents. But
since 2004, the water provided to more than 49 million people has contained
illegal concentrations of chemicals like arsenic or radioactive substances like
uranium, as well as dangerous bacteria often found in sewage.
Regulators were informed of each of those violations as they occurred. But
regulatory records show that fewer than 6 percent of the water systems that
broke the law were ever fined or punished by state or federal officials,
including those at the Environmental Protection Agency, which has
ultimate responsibility for enforcing standards.
Studies indicate that drinking water contaminants are linked to millions of
instances of illness within the United States
each year.
In some instances, drinking water violations were one-time events, and probably
posed little risk. But for hundreds of other systems, illegal contamination
persisted for years, records show.
On Tuesday, the Senate Environment and Public Works committee will question a
high-ranking E.P.A. official about the agency’s enforcement of drinking-water
safety laws. The E.P.A. is expected to announce a new policy for how it polices
the nation’s 54,700 water systems.
“This administration has made it clear that clean water is a top priority,”
said an E.P.A. spokeswoman, Adora Andy, in response to questions regarding the
agency’s drinking water enforcement. The E.P.A. administrator, Lisa P.
Jackson, this year announced a wide-ranging overhaul of enforcement
of the Clean Water Act, which regulates pollution into waterways.
“The previous eight years provide a perfect example of what happens when
political leadership fails to act to protect our health and the environment,”
Ms. Andy added.
Water pollution has become a growing concern for some lawmakers as government
oversight of polluters has waned. Senator Barbara
Boxer, Democrat of California, in 2007 asked the E.P.A. for data on
Americans’ exposure to some contaminants in drinking water.
The New York Times has compiled and analyzed millions of records from water
systems and regulators around the nation, as part of a series of articles about
worsening pollution in American waters, and regulators’ response.
An analysis of E.P.A. data shows that Safe Drinking Water Act violations have
occurred in parts of every state. In the prosperous town of Ramsey,
N.J., for instance, drinking water tests since 2004 have detected illegal
concentrations of arsenic, a carcinogen, and the dry cleaning solvent
tetrachloroethylene, which has also been linked to cancer.
In New York state, 205
water systems have broken the law by delivering tap water that contained
illegal amounts of bacteria since 2004.
However, almost none of those systems were ever punished. Ramsey was not fined
for its water violations, for example, though a Ramsey official said that
filtration systems have been installed since then. In New York,
only three water systems were penalized for bacteria violations, according to
federal data.
The problem, say current and former government officials, is that enforcing the
Safe Drinking Water Act has not been a federal priority.
“There is significant reluctance within the E.P.A. and Justice Department to
bring actions against municipalities, because there’s a view that they are
often cash-strapped, and fines would ultimately be paid by local taxpayers,”
said David Uhlmann, who headed the environmental crimes division at the Justice
Department until 2007.
“But some systems won’t come into compliance unless they are forced to,” added
Mr. Uhlmann, who now teaches at the University of Michigan law school. “And sometimes a court
order is the only way to get local governments to spend what is needed.”
A half-dozen current and former E.P.A. officials said in interviews that they
tried to prod the agency to enforce the drinking-water law, but found little
support.
“I proposed drinking water cases, but they got shut down so fast that I’ve
pretty much stopped even looking at the violations,” said one longtime E.P.A.
enforcement official who, like others, requested anonymity for fear of
reprisals. “The top people want big headlines and million-dollar settlements.
That’s not drinking-water cases.”
The majority of drinking water violations since 2004 have occurred at water
systems serving fewer than 20,000 residents, where resources and managerial
expertise are often in short supply.
It is unclear precisely how many American illnesses are linked to contaminated
drinking water. Many of the most dangerous contaminants regulated by the Safe
Drinking Water Act have been tied to diseases like cancer that can take years
to develop.
But scientific research indicates that as many as 19 million Americans may
become ill each year due to just the parasites, viruses and bacteria in
drinking water. Certain types of cancer — such as breast and prostate cancer —
have risen over the past 30 years, and research indicates they are likely tied
to pollutants like those found in drinking water.
The violations counted by the Times analysis include only situations where
residents were exposed to dangerous contaminants, and exclude violations that
involved paperwork or other minor problems.
In response to inquiries submitted by Senator Boxer, the E.P.A. has reported
that more than three million Americans have been exposed since 2005 to drinking
water with illegal concentrations of arsenic and radioactive elements, both of
which have been linked to cancer at small doses.
In some areas, the amount of radium detected in drinking water was 2,000
percent higher than the legal limit, according to E.P.A. data.
But federal regulators fined or punished fewer than 8 percent of water systems
that violated the arsenic and radioactive standards. The E.P.A., in a
statement, said that in a majority of situations, state regulators used
informal methods — like providing technical assistance — to help systems that
had violated the rules.
But many systems remained out of compliance, even after aid was offered,
according to E.P.A. data. And for over a quarter of systems that violated the
arsenic or radioactivity standards, there is no record that they were ever
contacted by a regulator, even after they sent in paperwork revealing their
violations.
Those figures are particularly worrisome, say researchers, because the Safe
Drinking Water Act’s limits on arsenic are so weak to begin with. A system
could deliver tap water that puts residents at a 1-in-600 risk of developing
bladder cancer from arsenic, and still comply with the law.
Despite the expected announcement of reforms, some mid-level E.P.A. regulators
say they are skeptical that any change will occur.
“The same people who told us to ignore Safe Drinking Water Act violations are
still running the divisions,” said one mid-level E.P.A. official. “There’s no
accountability, and so nothing’s going to change.”