As PFAS concerns grow, more Americans turn to blood testing for answers
By Dan Lampariello, Jack Amrock & Nathan Aaron | 6 News | June 11, 2026

Read the full article by Dan Lampariello, Jack Amrock & Nathan Aaron (6 News)
"Along River Road in Benton, families are bound by more than geography; they are connected by contamination.
“For a decade or two, my family and I were drinking the water," Mike Deroche, who's lived there since the 1980s, said.
That water was later found to contain high levels of PFAS, so-called “forever chemicals” linked to a range of health concerns. State officials say the contamination traces back to the once-approved practice or spreading wastewater sludge, or biosolids, on farmland as fertilizer.
“We recognized the fields across the street were being spread, in the 80s and 90s, with a substance other than manure,” Deroche said. "It had quite the odor to it."
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