By Stalling Compliance with PFAS Regulations Republicans May Cause Rate Hikes for NC Residents

Source: WRAL

North Carolina residents are facing a growing health risk and a potential financial burden as state regulators delay setting limits on harmful chemicals known as PFAS.

Elizabeth Biser, head of the Department of Environmental Quality, expressed her frustration with the Republican members of the Environmental Management Commission (EMC), which has repeatedly blocked rules to limit the amount of PFAS companies can dump into waterways.

“All we’re asking is that the companies who are using PFAS not put it in the environment,” Biser told WRAL.

PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are linked to various health problems, including cancer. Millions of North Carolinians already have levels of PFAS in their drinking water exceeding new federal health advisories.

The EMC, a state board with Republican appointees, has declined to move forward with setting limits for PFAS in both surface and groundwater. Biser accuses commission members of using stalling tactics, despite the DEQ providing requested data, including a cost analysis.

This delay has serious consequences.

Firstly, it pushes the financial burden of cleaning up contaminated water onto residents. Cities like Fayetteville and Wilmington have already spent millions installing filtration systems, leading to higher water rates.

“It really is potentially a very significant cost impact to any water system that’s going to have to install a water treatment technology,” said Ed Buchan, Environmental Coordinator for the City of Raleigh.

Secondly, the longer regulations are delayed, the closer the state gets to a federal deadline for meeting PFAS limits. With hundreds of water systems needing upgrades, delays could force even steeper rate hikes.

“Do they need to actually count body bags before they’re willing to take action?,” Biser asked.
The next EMC meeting is on September 11th. Residents are encouraged to attend, either in-person or online, and voice their concerns about protecting their clean water.

Share:

More Posts

 La Corte de Apelaciones Federal Mantiene el Bloqueo al Uso de la Ley de Enemigos Extranjeros por Parte de Trump para Deportar Inmigrantes

Una corte de apelaciones federal ha rechazado la solicitud de la administración Trump para levantar una orden de restricción temporal (TRO) que bloquea el uso de la Ley de Enemigos Extranjeros por parte de la administración Trump para deportar a inmigrantes. La decisión de 2-1 proviene de una demanda presentada por la Unión Americana de Libertades Civiles (ACLU), Democracy Forward y la ACLU del Distrito de Columbia.

¡Únete a la Lucha por los Derechos de los Pacientes con Planned Parenthood!

El miércoles 2 de abril, la Corte Suprema de los Estados Unidos escuchará los argumentos orales en el caso Medina v. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic, un caso de Carolina del Sur que decidirá si el gobierno puede impedir que las personas que usan Medicaid accedan a los servicios de Planned Parenthood, como anticonceptivos, exámenes de cáncer y otros servicios rutinarios de salud sexual y reproductiva. Este caso pone en riesgo el acceso a la atención médica para millones de personas que han confiado en Planned Parenthood para servicios de salud sexual y reproductiva.