The dangers of PFAS — and of downplaying their ubiquity

By Sarah Trent | High Country News | March 5, 2024

Read the full article by Sarah Trent (High Country News)

“When the simple blue-and-white postcard arrived in January 2023, Sarah Ferris missed it. The mailer, sent by the city of Vancouver, Washington, told 270,000 municipal water users that a group of chemicals called PFAS had been found in city water. Levels were low, the postcard said; the city would soon test again to comply with state law and share more information.

When a more detailed flyer arrived in April, Ferris looked it over. A chart showed that water at three of the city’s nine wellfields had tested above the state limit for two common PFAS chemicals, PFOA and PFOS. Other sections called these levels ‘very low,’ and said experts were ‘still learning about their health impacts.’ 

Ferris tried to decipher it all. ‘I was scanning, not really having time to delve into all of it and decode,’ she recalled. She was busy, six months pregnant, finally over the first-trimester nausea but anxious about her high-risk pregnancy. There was also a new part-time job and an impending breakup that would soon make her a single mom. Ferris dropped the flyer onto a stack of papers to read later, but never did."

This content provided by the PFAS Project.

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