AG Kaul & EPA Action
Wisconsin Attorney General Josh Kaul recently led a 22-state coalition urging the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to regulate PFAS chemicals.
The comments from the multistate coalition
- Urge EPA to regulate specific PFAS chemicals PFOA and PFOS under the Safe Drinking Water Act, setting national drinking water standards.
- Request EPA regulate PFOA and PFOS at levels “well below” the existing EPA health advisory level of 70 parts per trillion (ppt). The comments reference proposed and enacted PFAS regulations in various states at levels as low as 8 ppt.
- Encourage EPA to regulate chemicals in the PFAS family other than PFOA and PFOS and to evaluate regulating all PFAS as a class.
- Recommend EPA promulgate drinking water standards as soon as possible, but no later than 18 months from the time EPA determines to regulate. (EPA has made a preliminary determination to regulate PFOA and PFOS but has not made that determination for other PFAS chemicals.)
States joining Wisconsin in the comments were California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Virginia, and Washington.
Wisconsin Regulation – Rulemaking and PFAS Action Council
At the state level, Wisconsin’s Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is in early stages of promulgating rules that would regulate PFOA and PFOS. The state Department of Health Services (DHS) has recommended a combined groundwater standard of 20 ppt and a preventive action limit of 2 ppt for those two chemicals, but those recommendations are not enforceable until DNR finalizes rules.
Meanwhile, DNR, as directed by the governor in Executive Order #40, is leading a group of Wisconsin state agency officials (Wisconsin PFAS Action Council, or WisPAC) as they prepare to present a state PFAS action plan to the governor and legislature. WisPAC met for the first time in several months on June 17.
DNR began the June 17 meeting by laying out a revised timeline for the PFAS action plan. The executive order set a July 1 deadline for the action plan, but due to COVID-19 DNR now estimates they will publish the plan in November. WisPAC will meet again next on July 16 and plans to spend the next few months finalizing recommendations to be included in the report.
DNR emphasized that work on PFAS has continued throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. DNR has been participating in monthly calls with other state leaders in the Great Lakes PFAS Task Force. DNR has also established an Office of Emerging Contaminants, which is currently focused on PFAS. In addition to drafting rules on PFAS water standards, DNR is continuing research and drafting guidance on biosolids, disposal, and firefighting foam best practices.
Other agencies provided updates on their work on PFAS. DHS said they will release groundwater standard recommendations on the next set of PFAS compounds (other than PFOA and PFOS) this fall. Agencies including the UW System, Department of Public Instruction, Department of Safety & Professional Services, Office of the Commissioner of Insurance and Department of Transportation have continued research and public outreach on PFAS issues.
DNR is providing WisPAC members with issue papers outlining agencies’ recommendations for the action plan. DNR will gather feedback from WisPAC members on those issue papers for the next meeting, where WisPAC members will approve the plan outline.
DNR also laid out and requested feedback on ideas from the council’s two subgroups. The local government subgroup has suggested:
- Banning PFAS altogether
- Providing tools for local governments (e.g. a model industrial user survey, model ordinances, model public communications)
- Creating a licensing program for fire department use of PFAS containing foams
- Implementing emergency rules for interim groundwater standards
- Creating a centralized state agency PFAS webpage
The citizens subgroup has suggested:
- Banning PFAS altogether
- Giving DNR flexibility to address additional emerging contaminants
- Allowing local governments to set more restrictive PFAS standards
- Drafting guidance about PFAS liability, specifically on the Voluntary Party Liability Exemption program and responsible party liability
- Prioritizing communication about avoiding exposure
Ideas taken from DNR’s public input survey included banning PFAS altogether and looking at food safety issues and concerns with specific sites.
DNR took public comments before adjourning the meeting.
More on PFAS regulation in Wisconsin.