For Immediate Release: August 28, 2008
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337
WIDESPREAD CONTAMINATION FOUND IN NEW JERSEY DRINKING WATER — Survey of Wells Is Far From Well; State Does Not Follow-Up on Pollutants
Trenton — Tens of thousands of New Jersey residents are drinking polluted water, according to a new state report. Despite widespread exposure to drinking unsafe well water, state health officials ignore the risks to an unknowing public, according to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER).
The new report from the state Private Well Testing Act Program covers the five-year period from 2002-2007 and includes samples from more than one out of eight of the estimated 400,000 private residential drinking water wells in New Jersey. The results are sobering:
“This report says that when you drink from a well in New Jersey, do so at your own risk,” stated New Jersey PEER Director Bill Wolfe, a former DEP analyst. “What is at the bottom of these wells proves that the state testing program is broken and in need of a total overhaul.”
Among the failings cited by PEER that require legislative or regulatory reform are –
“A classic example of what’s wrong occurred in Sussex County, Byram Township, where a well at a house being sold was found to be seriously contaminated with trichloroethylene. The public notification regulations suggest that the local health authority notify neighboring properties within at least 200 feet but because no homes were located within 200 feet of the property, neither the local health authority nor the state performed any subsequent sampling,” Wolfe added. “Our drinking water protections should be – but are not – better than those in the Third World.”
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Look at other recent steps backward in protecting state groundwater
Contrast huge water infrastructure deficit in New Jersey
New Jersey PEER is a state chapter of a national alliance of state and federal agency resource professionals working to ensure environmental ethics and government accountability