News

Hazardous chemicals contaminate drinking water, soil and food worldwide. Who is responsible for the contamination caused by these "forever chemicals"?
Nearly 3,500 residents across 16 rural villages have been unable to drink tap water since July 10 due to a record-breaking ...
The new law, passed in June, sets some of the toughest rules in the country for PFAS, also known as forever chemicals, ...
There was hardly a spare seat at Tuesday night’s meeting of the Temple Terrace City Council. Most of the unusually large ...
Craft beer and PFAS pollution — two things that are about as North Carolinian as barbecue and being “first in flight.” A ...
EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin claims to prioritize combatting long-lasting chemicals called PFAS. Despite this, the agency has ...
Hundreds of thousands of residents are served by the affected systems. City officials must monitor and mitigate the PFAS in ...
The report from March shows the results of a test that found per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) — which are also ...
From PFAS contamination at the former Naval Air Warfare Center in Trenton, to toxic dumping in Toms River, to the infamous ...
Maryland is investing millions to remove harmful PFAS “forever chemicals” from drinking water, starting with a $31 million ...
A forever chemical known as TFA is accumulating in our environment, contaminating our rivers, food and even our wine.
The Occoquan Reservoir supplies water for around a million people in Northern Virginia and it exceeds the EPA’s max contaminant levels for forever chemicals.