Georgia officials knew chemicals from carpet mills were polluting local water. The people did not
Growing up in northwest Georgia, Stormy Bost lived her life in the water. During summers she plucked crawdads from the neighborhood creek and played in its cool depths, racing home for dinner to beat the setting sun.
Waiting for her were pitchers of sweet tea, which her family brewed using tap water.
Your familys going through a gallon every day or two, and its cheap, Bost said. But it comes from the faucet.
As a parent, Bost made sweet tea the same way for her own children until a few years ago when she learned the local tap water contained toxic chemicals called PFAS.
Bost and her husband are raising two daughters in Calhoun, the same small river town dominated by the regions multibillion-dollar carpet industry where she was reared. For decades, textile mills relied on PFAS in popular brands like Stainmaster and Scotchgard for stain resistance. Some of the chemicals that didnt stick on carpets were flushed with the industrys wastewater into local sewer pipes and, eventually, the regions rivers.
The same odorless, colorless chemicals in tap water here have accumulated in Bosts body, blood tests show. Her PFAS levels are higher than national health guidelines consider safe and, at 34, she has been diagnosed with liver and thyroid conditions the types of ailments that research has linked to PFAS.
https://apnews.com/article/pfas-water-contamination-georgia-alabama-f99eddb12d52583cf763613001e2eb8c
How many of the rest of us are dealing with the same kind of thing from carpet mills, furniture plants, chemical factories, agricultural waste, etc., and don't know it?
underpants
(197,050 posts)Ive been to Dalton many times. Georgia was making so much in taxes that turned a blind eye.
appalachiablue
(44,170 posts)ret5hd
(22,573 posts)all the regulations and rules and such you would like to just go away.