Community Corner
Suez Water In Franklin Lakes Named To Contaminated Site List
A nonprofit activist group named 43 sites in New Jersey that have been contaminated with toxic chemicals, including 1 in Franklin Lakes.
FRANKLIN LAKES, NJ — Suez Water in Franklin Lakes was included on a list of 43 sites in New Jersey contaminated with toxic chemicals, a new report by a national nonprofit shows.
According to the report by the Environmental Working Group, an activist nonprofit, the water is contaminated with perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, known collectively as PFAS.
Water was tested from May to November 2018. Several PFAS were found.
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Water from several other Bergen County sites, including Ridgewood Water and the Fair Lawn and Allendale water departments, was also contaminated and listed in the report.
SUEZ spokesperson Deborah Vial said that all systems owned or operated by SUEZ are significantly below the health advisory limit for PFAS.
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"SUEZ is actively pursuing and piloting treatment strategies to further eliminate the presence of PFAS in the system," Vial said.
EWG said this week that at least 610 places in 43 states are now known to be contaminated with perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, known collectively as PFAS. That's up from the 172 the organization had identified in July 2018. A total of 19 million people have had their water source affected.
The new study gives New Jerseyans a comprehensive look at just how widespread the problem is, and offers a comparative glance at how severely area military bases, drinking water wells, and other sites have been compromised.
PFAS has long been a concern in New Jersey, and it's a concern that's brought state and federal attention to a number of counties.
The state Department of Environmental Protection has identified five companies it says are responsible for the "extensive contamination" and directing them to fund millions of dollars in assessment and cleanup efforts, Commissioner Catherine R. McCabe recently announced.
To see all the New Jersey sites on the list, click here.
— With reporting by Tom Davis, Patch staff
Email: daniel.hubbard@patch.com
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