-Caveat Lector-

http://ens-news.com/ens/nov2002/2002-11-01-06.asp

California Voters Alerted to Water Contamination

SAN FRANCISCO, California, November 1, 2002 (ENS) - Deteriorating water works,
pollution, and outdated treatment technology are combining to deliver drinking water 
that
might pose health risks to residents in four of California's largest cities, a new 
report
warns.

While tap water quality in Fresno, Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco meets most
federal and state safety standards, it still contains pollutants that pose health and
environmental risks, concludes the early release California edition of, "What's On Tap?
Grading Drinking Water in U.S. Cities."


Drinking tap water may not be safe in four California cities. (Photo courtesy USGS)

"Most Californians take it for granted that their tap water is pure and their water
infrastructure is safe," said Erik Olson, principal author of the report from the 
Natural
Resources Defense Council (NRDC). "Our report shows that they shouldn't."

The four city California report is part of a larger one on water supplies in 19 cities
nationwide that the NRDC will publish in the next few months. The environmental group
decided to release the California section early to let voters know about the problems 
before
they vote next Tuesday on Proposition 50, a ballot initiative that would authorize 
$3.4 billion
to protect water resources.

The NRDC report found no confirmed violations of enforceable federal tap water 
standards
in the four cities, but concluded that infrastructure and other problems in each of the
municipal water supplies might pose health risks to some residents.

Although the report does not advise residents to stop drinking tap water, it cites 
medical
experts who suggest that pregnant women and parents of infants consult with their 
health
care providers.

Echoing recommendations by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the
NRDC also urged that people who have serious immune system problems, such as those
taking some cancer chemotherapy drugs or people with HIV/AIDS, consult with their 
health
care providers regarding the safety of drinking tap water.

Fresno's water supply, which the report cites as the worst of the four, has serious 
problems
caused by nitrates, pesticides and industrial chemicals. To address these concerns, the
report recommends that Fresno improve its waterworks infrastructure and source water
protection.

Perhaps acknowledging the problem, the city of Fresno this year urged that pregnant
women and parents of infants consult with their health care providers about their tap
water.

"Nitrates and other contaminants are a serious problem in Fresno's tap water," said Dr.
Beatte Ritz of Physicians for Social Responsibility, an assistant professor of 
epidemiology at
the University of California at Los Angeles School of Public Health. "Last year the 
city itself
told pregnant women to avoid drinking it. That's good advice."


The Hetch Hetchy watershed, an area located in Yosemite National Park, provides 
drinking
water for San Francisco. (Photo courtesy National Park Service)

San Francisco's water supply exceeds a new Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) tap
water standard for trihalomethanes, a family of toxic chemicals unintentionally created
when chlorine is used as a disinfectant. The standard took effect nationally in 2002, 
but the
EPA has granted the city an extension until 2004 to meet it.

The report recommends that San Francisco make major water treatment and infrastructure
improvements to address its water quality problems. But it also notes the city's source
water protection effort, which includes working with ranchers in the Alameda watershed 
to
prevent cattle from polluting waterways.

Los Angeles also has significant levels of chlorine byproducts, as well as substantial
concentrations of arsenic. Although below the new EPA standard, the arsenic levels 
there
are high enough, according to the National Academy of Sciences, to pose a significant
cancer risk.

Sections of the Los Angeles water supply have elevated levels of radioactive and cancer
causing radon, and levels of the rocket fuel perchlorate - a thyroid toxin - that 
exceed the
California health warning level and the EPA's draft safe level. The system's water 
also is
compromised by uncovered reservoirs, and some city well water shows elevated nitrate
levels.

All of these problems will require major infrastructure and treatment improvements, and
stronger measures to protect Los Angeles water sources from pollution, according to the
report.

San Diego's water supply has a high level of trihalomethanes - averaging slightly 
below the
new EPA standard but still posing a risk to public health - and perchlorate in parts 
of the
system at levels higher than the state's action level and the draft EPA safe level.

The San Diego water supply also has other contaminants that, while not at levels high
enough to trigger violations, exceed EPA health standards.

The contaminants include ethylene dibromide, a carcinogen and reproductive toxin; lead;
and three cancer causing radioactive elements. The report concluds that, like the other
cities, San Diego needs to protect its source water from pollution and make significant
investments to improve water treatment and infrastructure.

To protect drinking water sources, the report recommends that the state and cities 
upgrade
drinking water treatment, invest in water conservation measures, and replace and update
pipes and water distribution system components.

The report also recommends that state and municipal authorities purchase land or
easements, and adopt standards to protect watersheds and areas above aquifers draining
into California water supplies.

"The problems NRDC's report found in four major California cities are emblematic of 
what
both large and small municipalities are facing across the state," said Marguerite 
Young of
California Clean Water Action. "And on November 5, California voters have an 
opportunity
to do something about it: Pass Proposition 50. Prop. 50 will provide critically needed 
funds
to improve drinking water quality infrastructure, prevent water pollution, and promote
water conservation."

Young also urged the Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board to approve new
controls for agricultural discharges, which pollute the drinking water supply of 
millions of
Californians.

The report reviews each of the cities' mandated right to know reports, which are 
designed
to inform residents about water system problems. Among other things, the NRDC found 
that
San Francisco failed to include a required warning for immune compromised people
regarding the potential risks posed by pathogens in its water, San Diego failed to 
disclose
the levels of radioactive and other contaminants in its water, and Fresno buried 
critical
information about high nitrate levels in footnotes.

The Los Angeles right to know report received relatively high marks for revealing tap 
and
source water problems.

"Fresno, San Diego and San Francisco don't adequately inform their residents about
contamination," said NRDC's Olson. "Californians have a right to know what's in their 
tap
water and whether it might harm them."

An executive summary of the report is available at: http://www.nrdc.org/water/
drinking/uscities/execsum.asp


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