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• Tap Water Dangers Hidden From Public, Senators To Hold Hearings To Get The Truth |
The Public Was Kept In The Dark
About Drugs In The Water And Possible Health Risk.
Many cities were and are still are touting how clean their tap
water is and calling for the publics trust. Tap water advocates
are trying to create a "return to the tap" movement, saying the drug tainted
water is cheap and better for the environment, even if the real risk to health
are unknown at this time. U.S. senators now want the truth about
..."what's really in the water?"
Pantagraph.com: Two veteran U.S. senators
said they plan to hold hearings in response to an Associated Press investigation
into the presence of trace amounts of pharmaceuticals in the drinking water
supplies of at least 41 million Americans.
Also, U.S. Rep. Allyson
Schwartz, D-Pa., has asked the EPA to establish a national task force to
investigate the issue and make recommendations to Congress on any legislative
actions needed.
Sen. Barbara Boxer, who heads the Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee, and Sen. Frank Lautenberg, chairman of the
Transportation, Safety, Infrastructure Security and Water Quality Subcommittee,
said the oversight hearings would likely be held in April.
Boxer,
D-Calif., said she was “alarmed at the news” that pharmaceuticals are turning up
in the nation’s drinking water, while Lautenberg, a New Jersey Democrat who said
he was “deeply concerned” by the AP findings.
Both represent states where
pharmaceuticals had been detected in drinking water supplies, but not disclosed
to the public.
EPA spokesman Timothy Lyons said the agency is “committed
to keeping the nation’s water supply clean, safe and the best in the world. We
encourage all Americans to be responsible when disposing of prescription
drugs.”
The Lautenberg-Boxer announcement came just 24 hours after the
AP’s release of the first installment of its three-part series, titled
PharmaWater.
The five-month-long inquiry by the AP National Investigative
Team found that while water is screened for drugs by some suppliers, they
usually don’t tell their customers that they have found medication in
it.
The series shows how drugs — mostly the residue of medications taken
by people, excreted and flushed down the toilet — have gotten into the water
supplies of at least 24 major metropolitan areas.
Source:http://www.pantagraph.com/articles/2008/03/23/news/
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