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Several Greater Cincinnati water supplies were found to have high levels of forever chemicals. Find out what that means.
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Shreveport Times on MSNWhere have forever chemicals been detected in Louisiana? See EPA data on drinking water
Over the past three years, the EPA has tested U.S. drinking water systems for forever chemicals. Here's where chemicals were ...
For the first time, the EPA also issued final advisories for limits in drinking water of the PFAS chemical GenX. “Communities have suffered far too long from exposure to these forever chemicals.
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'Forever chemicals' found in Indiana water, EPA data shows. Two Indiana cities over the EPA limit.
The EPA has detected PFAS, or 'forever chemicals,' in Indiana water. Low levels have been reported statewide and two cities are over the federal limit.
Big cities more often find 'forever chemicals' in their drinking water, but some small towns are reporting eye-popping levels ...
That's why the EPA set a rule that limits the amount of six common PFAS chemicals in the drinking water. In the two months since the rule was finalized, at least three separate lawsuits have been ...
EPA testing has shown that a number of rural water systems here exceeded the standards for PFAS, resulting in systems seeking options to deal with it.
Many advocates and experts applauded EPA's rule as a critically important step but said they still want to see the agency regulate all 12,000 chemicals in the PFAS category and hold the companies ...
The EPA designated two forever chemicals as hazardous substances, an action intended to ensure quicker cleanup of the toxic compounds. (AP Photo: Joshua A. Bickel) ...
FILE – Vials containing samples of forever chemicals, known as PFAS, sit in a tray, April 10, 2024, at a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency lab in Cincinnati.
‘Forever chemicals’ in drinking water pose risk even at very low levels, EPA says Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan speaks at his alma mater, North Carolina A&T State ...
EPA Administrator Michael Regan said PFAS, known as 'forever chemicals,' have evaded regulation for too long and the government will take action.
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