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Dumping toxic oil and gas wastewater into unlined pits—How is this still a thing?
For some reason, California STILL allows oil and gas companies to dump their toxic wastewater in open and unlined pits.
The California Water Commission Needs to Acknowledge the Elephant in the Room
You know that feeling when there’s something that really needs discussing, but nobody wants to talk about it?
How Drinking Water Standards are Created in California
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency establishes federal standards for drinking water contaminants that each state must enforce. These standards determine the maximum concentration allowable for a specific contaminant in drinking water at the tap. States must comply with these standards, but also have the option to adopt more stringent standards, or develop standards regulations for contaminants that the federal government has not acted on (perchlorate is a good example of such a standard). A state cannot set a drinking water standard that is less protective than the US EPA.
In California
TCP in California's Drinking Water
California is the only state to date to regulate 1,2,3 trichloropropane (TCP) in drinking water. Because of its serious health impacts, the standard for TCP is 5 parts per billion (ppb), which is the level at which the chemical can be reliably detected in water. Dozens of water systems have successfully sued the two mega-companies that caused contamination in the state’s water – Dow Chemical and Shell - in order to recoup treatment costs. At the same time, corporate attempts to challenge the standard in court have failed.
A tragedy that could have been avoided
In the 1940s, the agricultural
Buyer Beware
Buyer Beware set out to analyze the interior coatings and lids of nearly 200 canned foods collected in 19 states and one Canadian province to determine whether the use of bisphenol A (BPA) continues to be widespread among major national brands and retailers of canned foods.