More

Water Utilities Lack Proper Filters For Weed-Killer

Huffington Post Investigative Fund   First Posted: 11/04/09 12:06 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:55 PM ET

Results from a federal drinking water monitoring program show that many public water companies are ineffective at removing a widely used weed-killer from their water supplies.

As the Huffington Post Investigative Fund reported earlier this week, the Environmental Protection Agency has failed to notify the public about data showing that the herbicide atrazine has been found at levels above the federal safety limit in drinking water in at least four states. Atrazine has been studied for its potential link to breast cancer, prostate cancer, and birth defects, and the EPA considers it to be a potential endocrine disruptor. It is banned in the European Union.


But the EPA's data also reveals that many public water filtration systems are not removing the herbicide. In many places, atrazine levels in untreated water sources such as rivers directly match the levels that come out of the tap.

A carbon filter with granular activated carbon -- in other words, a giant Brita-like filter -- should absorb all or most of the atrazine. But the EPA's atrazine monitoring data shows that many water utilities in the Corn Belt do not use carbon filtration. Many use rapid sand filters instead. They are cheaper and last longer, but are unable to remove organic compounds such as PCBs, phthalates, pharmaceuticals, and pesticides such as atrazine.

"Carbon filters might have to be replaced every couple of years whereas sand filters could last 20 to 30 years," said Alan Roberson, director of security and regulatory affairs at the American Water Works Association, a non-profit organization representing water utilities.

To recover the cost of filtering atrazine, water companies in six states are preparing a lawsuit against the makers of atrazine, the Swiss company Syngenta.

When you compare the raw and finished water of an effective carbon filtration system, you see something like the chart below, which shows weekly levels of atrazine in river water and drinking water as measured last year in Bowling Green, Ohio.


Bowling Green added carbon filters to the water system in 2000. "We installed the filters to take care of taste and odor problems, but it [also] gets the atrazine out of there," said Chad Johnson, assistant superintendent at the water utility. "These filters are expensive, though. Our new building cost about five million dollars."

Every year, the utility replaces six of the 12 filter vessels at a cost of $126,000, Johnson said. He said the water plant had received $5 million in stimulus funds, which will be used to partially fund an $11 million project to install new membranes, which will remove nitrates and other chemicals from the water.

Atchison, Kan., is among water systems that do not have adequate filters in place. The chart shows weekly levels of atrazine in river water and drinking water as measured last year.


"I'll be darned," said Michael Matthews, the utilities director in Atchison, Kan., upon hearing that atrazine was barely being filtered from his drinking water. "That's bad."

Water plant managers said the economic downturn has made it even harder to convert to more effective filters. "Right now, we can't afford anything," said Lloyd Littrell of the Beloit, Kansas water plant, where rapid sand filters are used.

"It's impossible to get atrazine out of the water with these filters. There's no way to remove it," he said. "But people need this water. We can't just shut our doors and tell people to drink from the river."

Stan Schafer of the Baxter Springs plant, where sand filters are used, said it was difficult to get funding for water cleanup even prior to the recession. "Shoot, I'd like another filter," he said. "But they're expensive. We did a $2.5 million update about three years ago and that system is falling apart."

A civil engineering professor at Virginia Tech University, Marc Edwards, said that the cost of granular activated carbon treatment could double the total cost of drinking water treatment in some rural and poor communities.

"We are used to paying very little for tap water," Edwards said. "It is hard for some rural communities to justify the higher costs of advanced treatment."

"Most water systems don't have the resources to buy a new filter," said Kirk Leifheit, Assistant Chief of the Drinking Water Program at the Ohio EPA. "They are reporting to us needs in the billions."

The EPA only monitors the river water and drinking water in about 150 water systems, so it is unknown whether other communities might be experiencing problems filtering atrazine. Washington, D.C., and Maryland, for example, are not part of that program.

However, atrazine is heavily used in the Maryland area, according to data from the U.S. Geological Survey. The Washington Aqueduct, which treats water from the Potomac River for about 1 million in the DC area, does not filter for atrazine.


Water systems in 57 cities are preparing a lawsuit against the atrazine manufacturer, the Swiss company Syngenta, to recover the cost of filtering the chemical out of drinking water. Utilities in Illinois, Ohio, Kansas, Indiana, Missouri, and Iowa are preparing to file suits in state courts. A hearing in Illinois is scheduled for Monday.

"Many of those water providers have incurred an enormous amount of expenses at a time when their tax base is shrinking,"said Stephen Tillery of the Korein Tillery law firm in St. Louis, who represents the water systems. "They're cash strapped."

Jere White, executive director of the Kansas City Corn Growers Association and the Kansas Grain Sorghum Producers Association, has been fighting atrazine regulation at both a local and national level since 1995. He has been vocal about opposing the class action lawsuit against Syngenta.

"The difference between them [the lawyers] and an ambulance chaser is the fact that with an ambulance chaser, you at least assume that there's an ambulance and an injury," White said in a phone interview.

White is also chairman of the Triazine Network which has been fighting atrazine regulation since 1995. The Network and the Corn Growers, according to White, receive regular funding from Syngenta -- for travel, speaking engagements (including EPA hearings), and education, though he pointed out that it has never been earmarked specifically for "advocacy." The Network, according to its website, "strives to keep the beneficial triazine herbicides available in the United States."

Updated August 27, 4:54 p.m. In an interview today, Jere White of the Kansas Corn Growers Association said he does not oppose all regulation of atrazine. As he characterized it, his organizations are seeking scientific justification from the EPA for stricter laws regulating the chemical.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

Results from a federal drinking water monitoring program show that many public water companies are ineffective at removing a widely used weed-killer from their water supplies. As the Huffington Pos...
Results from a federal drinking water monitoring program show that many public water companies are ineffective at removing a widely used weed-killer from their water supplies. As the Huffington Pos...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 13
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
RazeTemple
12:36 PM on 08/31/2009
...and birth control hormones, and most of the heart medicine and viagra that people take(just to name a couple)...it all comes right back out of your tap. What some people take, we ALL take. I use a brita filter, and always will. But I'm afraid that only does so much.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:12 AM on 08/30/2009
One word: Brita.

I'm not going to get all worked up about Atrazine specifically, because I'm aware that there are hundreds of other pesticides and chemicals in my water. Whatever goes into the watershed goes into the public drinking system and then comes out my faucet.

This has been known for decades. I'm not sure why it's news now.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KristinNoelle
10:01 PM on 08/29/2009
Unfortunately most people are under the mistaken impression that we have all these great systems in place to protect us. We think everything is "proven" safe before it is unleashed on the public. The truth is that a significant number of dangers aren't discovered until after people become ill or die. Often, this can take years and by that time, large numbers of people have already been exposed.

The lack of proper water filtration is dangerous. You can see the effects much more clearly by observing individuals who live near agricultural areas and have well water. I know correlation doesn't equal causation, but I would still like to offer two examples:

A friend of mine who has well water in an agricultural area has a child with an extremely rare genetic disorder. Maybe a coincidence, but what about the fact that two other children within a block have equally rare genetic disorders?

I also have a friend who works as a pediatric home health nurse near Green Bay Wisconsin. The area in which she works is referred to as the "Brain Cancer Belt" amongst her coworkers because nearly every child patient with brain cancer is clustered within one small area.

Just something to think about.

And FYI, you can buy reverse osmosis filtered water at most grocery stores for pretty cheap. I pay about 0.30 cents a gallon.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jetphixer
Bee Keeper & Retired
09:57 PM on 08/29/2009
Susan: the link wont work!! Anyway as a cancer survivor i understand this stuff . The crop stuff gets into th ewater that gets into milk for one thing. It also get adsorbed into the food we all eat besides the water this stuff kills people also. IT CAUSES CANCER>>NUFF SAID
01:29 PM on 08/28/2009
Poison the water so you can sell clean water, poison the air so you can sell clean air, poison the food, so you can sell clean food, Capitalism at work.
12:27 PM on 08/28/2009
Herbicides should be banned outright, but oil and chemical companies have bought all the legislators.

Without a co-ordinated, massive hue and cry against them, we will be consuming them for generations to come, with disastrous consequences for life on earth.

I have tried to get my county and state to tell me how many gallons of Round-up they spray each year, but apparently this is classified information, more secret than CIA operations. But you try, in your areas, and see if you get any answers. I bet you will find that those you speak with are colluding to hide these figures from the public.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:25 AM on 08/30/2009
I would guess that your county and state governments might know how much Roundup they buy each year, but not how much they spray. It's also not at all clear that Roundup poses a significant threat to anyone or anything except the vegetation it's sprayed on, *as long as it's used according to directions.* This means no skin contact, no inhalation of the spray, etc. Roundup's half-life in the soil seems to be up to 145 days, but is usually less. It breaks down rapidly into chemicals which aren't identified - yet - as being harmful to wildlife or the water table.

More studies need to be done, but I feel that calling for herbicides to be "banned outright" is unrealistic. We'd all be up to our necks in weeds within a few weeks, and costs of more frequent mowing, deeper mulching, etc. - especially at municipal and state levels - would be staggering. The two "organic" alternatives - salt water and fire - are potentially much more dangerous than we now know glyphosate to be.

I'm a Master Gardener who gardens organically, and I use glyphosate carefully and selectively - on my gravel driveway, for instance, about twice a year.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
11:26 AM on 08/28/2009
Ban weed killers
States need to start first.
09:38 AM on 08/28/2009
"I'll be darned," said Michael Matthews. That about sums it up. Oops, sorry about your cancer, but Jere White got a nice bonus from Syngenta for fighting against Americans interests and helping them dump chemicals here that they couldn't even sell in their own country. Way to go Jere.
11:58 PM on 08/27/2009
Very simple solution, ban weed killers..they kill more than weeds, amphibians are in collapse.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michmod
Made in Detroit.
10:21 PM on 08/27/2009
The EPA does not seem to prioritize based on public health. It would certainly seem carbon filters would filter out many contaminants not removed by other treatment methods. We should have them at all water treatment facilities. Period.
10:02 PM on 08/27/2009
My friend Rob Hartz thought EPA was protecting his town's drinking water in a much more regulated state : Massachusetts -- how wrong he was.

He writes:

Norfolk Southern and its New England-based partner Pan Am with its lengthy record of environmental violations and criminal convictions are threatening my town’s drinking water. Herbicides may the least of our problems.

Rest assured railroads are well-protected; your drinking water is not. When you are in their sites you may be shocked to learn that anything goes.

My name is Rob Hartz, head of Coalition for Aquifer Protection and a business consultant specializing in leadership and organizational change.

For the past 11 years, my organization and our allies have been fighting an uphill battle to protect the drinking water of two Massachusetts towns. The underground water source or aquifer is threatened by a major polluter, a railroad named Pan Am and it’s senior partner, Norfolk Southern. When I began telling friends and neighbors that our water was at risk, their response was, “what about the EPA and the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974?”

If you are in the path of a railroad with a lamentable history of environmental violations and are troubled by the response you get from regulators and political leaders, you are not alone.

For more information call (978) 952-6533 or e-mail me at robhartz@verizon.net.
01:36 PM on 08/28/2009
I agree with Quiviran -- "I'll be darned" sums it up.
Our descendants will be scratching their heads and saying, "I'll be darned -- I don't understand what they were thinking when they used herbicides and pesticides."
We weren't thinking about our water, that's for sure.
It's catching up to us.
Our challenge is to fight the system -- which seems daunting.
I'm on Rob Hartz's team where we're up against big business endorsed by Uncle Sam. A known polluter -- Pan Am Railways -- has federal endorsement to build whatever it wants over an underground water supply for 15,000 people.
It's shocking. What's worse is that many people believe we can't fight big money and big politics and change the system.
Comment on our blog at www.cleanwaterwarrior.com for more information.
This could happen in YOUR community.
Tell us your stories where you've fought to protect clean water in your town.