A family of man-made chemicals known as per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, is starting to gain national attention after studies have linked it to health issues, possibly including cancer
It’s prevalent at military installations around the country — including at Arnold Air Force Base in Middle Tennessee, where it’s found at high levels in some water. And there are concerns that it could be spread.
At Arnold, a dry track of gravel-filled land has been out of use since 1983. But for nearly two decades, it was where Air Force personnel built massive fires — and practiced putting them out.
That happened twice a month, or 24 times a year, says Dennis Timmons, the base’s manager of environmental remediation projects.
Starting in the 1970s, Timmons says, they used a special foam, AFFF, to put out those fires. The foam was effective in part because it contained the class of man-made chemicals known as PFAS.
They’re also found in everything from non-stick Teflon pans to fast-food wrappers, where they are prized for making products resistant to water, stains, grease and heat.
“Using it will extinguish a fire quickly,” says Timmons. “It prevents vapors from releasing and, I think, backfires.”
But in 2016, the Environmental Protection Agency released a health advisory saying less than 70 parts per trillion of this chemical should be in drinking water, because of increasing research showing they could be linked to human health concerns.
And, since this firefighting foam was prevalent on military sites, the Department of Defense decided to test its bases worldwide for contaminated water.
WPLN acquired that data from 2016 for Arnold Air Force Base. It found contamination in the groundwater below this fire-training site that is 2,500 times higher than the EPA’s health advisory limit. It contains two known toxic PFAS chemicals PFOA and PFOS.
Concerns About Spreading
PFAS can be challenging. They’re not only soluble in water, but also don’t easily break down in the environment. So, the chemicals can migrate and stick around. That’s why at Arnold, even though some of the fire-training sites had not been used in years, they still tested positive.
Now there’s growing concern these chemicals can end up in bodies of water used by the public. In fact, in their preliminary investigations, Arnold found one test suggesting evidence of small amounts of PFAS in the nearby Woods Reservoir, where people swim and fish recreationally.
But the military hasn’t tested the reservoir directly to see if there could be more.
Click here to interact with that map.
Under current Air Force requirements, it doesn’t have to test now, and it’s not clear that it may ever have to, at all. That’s because the Department of Defense is taking a worst-first approach, which means it’s starting by testing drinking water, which has passed through treatment plants and is ready for human consumption — and focusing on the bases that have the worst contamination.
“We have aggressively gone out to look everywhere we have potentially impacted drinking water where DOD is the known source,” says Maureen Sullivan, the DOD’s deputy assistant secretary of defense for environment.
So far, the drinking water tests at Arnold have passed EPA standards, so officials say they don’t have to do more at this time. But there’s still that issue of water in streams or in the ground, like the contamination under the fire-training site at Arnold.
Arnold isn’t alone in this situation. The DOD has found just over 400 installations worldwide where PFAS contamination is believed to have seeped into the ground or leached into streams. That includes two others in Tennessee, according to data from the state’s environmental agency.
But the DOD says it still hasn’t fully investigated whether that contamination has spread to water sources outside bases — places like Woods Reservoir.
“It’s a long process. … It involves a significant amount of sampling wells and analysis of water flow studies,” says Sullivan, who adds that because of legal requirements with the EPA, it could take years for that testing to happen, much less a cleanup.
Questioning The Response
That’s why some in Congress, like Rep. Katie Hill from California, accuse the DOD and the EPA of acting too slowly.
The EPA released an action plan in February to deal with PFAS. But at a March congressional hearing, Hill pointed out that, while the agency gives an advisory limit for the chemicals, it doesn’t enforce it.
Meanwhile, she says, people on military bases are worried.
“These are people who fight and have fought for our country. [They] expect the EPA and the DOD to take responsibility and work to regulate the harmful substances,” said Hill.
Some states have taken matters into their own hands. Michigan has enacted policies that limit PFAS levels. New Mexico is even suing the Air Force to clean up contaminated groundwater immediately
Tennessee formed a working group in 2017 to look at the problem. But it’s holding off on taking action, says Kendra Abkowitz of the state’s environmental agency.
“From our perspective, we’re interested in learning more,” she says, “and then developing a thoughtful and balanced and data-driven approach.”
So Tennessee isn’t regulating the chemical. And the military likely won’t take quick action unless it’s forced, says Kelly Moser, an attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center.
“I think you’re going to start seeing citizen groups and communities really putting pressure on the Department of Defense and a number of PFAS manufacturers,” said Moser. “People who are swimming, fishing, playing in our rivers and streams are at risk.”
In fact, in Washington state, a group of farmers and homeowners sued the Air Force under the federal Clean Water Act. But these citizen suits can happen only if residents know about PFAS in the first place.
Awareness seems to be low around Arnold Air Force base. Only a few dozen residents attend Arnold’s semi-annual meetings on environmental issues, and the base doesn’t provide information on its website about this particular chemical.
WPLN reached out to several officials and environmental groups in surrounding cities. Most were unaware of PFAS — or its existence at Arnold.