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Attorney General Mayes Backs Efforts to Uphold First Nationwide PFAS Drinking Water Protections

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Friday, January 24, 2025

Attorney General Mayes Backs Efforts to Uphold First Nationwide PFAS Drinking Water Protections

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Kris Mayes, Arizona Attorney General | AZAG

Attorney General Mayes joined a coalition filing an amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit defending a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency rule establishing the first nationwide drinking water standards for certain per- and polyfluoroalkyl “PFAS” forever chemicals under the Safe Drinking Water Act.

“Arizona stands with states across the nation in supporting the EPA’s efforts to establish enforceable safeguards against these toxic ‘forever’ chemicals in our drinking water," said Attorney General Mayes. “This rule is a crucial tool in addressing the widespread and long-term impacts of PFAS, ensuring that public water systems take the necessary steps to protect our communities."

The federal rule expands nationwide drinking water protections for four new PFAS and sets enforceable standards for six PFAS chemicals found in drinking water across the country: PFOA, PFOS, PFHxS, GenX, PFNA, and PFBS. The rule sets regulations for each chemical individually, and as mixtures, recognizing appropriately that these threats cannot be addressed in isolation. Under the rule, public water systems across the United States are required to test and, if necessary, treat drinking water for these contaminants.

The states have powerful interests in protecting the health of their residents from the harms of PFAS consumption through drinking water. These toxins were used for decades in myriad industrial and military settings, including airports and fire departments, and they continue to be used in countless consumer products, from car seats and strollers to non-stick cookware and food packaging.

PFAS will remain as pollutants in the environment without degrading, earning them the nickname “forever chemicals.” Decades of research shows that the presence of PFAS in drinking water threatens public health and safety. PFAS are highly toxic to humans and animals, with even minimal exposures over time associated with deleterious effects to human health, including various types of cancer, liver impacts, and ulcerative colitis. Dangerous and highly-mobile, PFAS wind their way from numerous sources into our drinking water systems, and then into our bodies—where they accumulate and persist.
In the amicus brief, the states argue that the rule would significantly improve public health and should be upheld. The brief supports EPA’s decision to

regulate PFAS contaminants both individually and as mixtures using a well-established hazard index approach, as well as the economic analysis underpinning the regulations, and EPA’s compliance with all procedural requirements.

Testing has already revealed thousands of contaminated drinking water sources across every state and the District of Columbia. Resources are available for public water systems to install treatment for PFAS, including billions in congressional funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, but more work is needed to secure our public water supply.

Attorney General Mayes has previously acted to protect against PFAS contamination and to hold chemical manufacturers accountable for knowingly contaminating our waters and natural resources. 

Arizona joins Connecticut, California and New Jersey, Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, and Oregon. 

Original source can be found here.

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