Health & Fitness
‘Forever Chemicals’ Likely Found In Water From Many RI Faucets: Study
In Rhode Island, PFAS, also known as forever chemicals, were found in water supplies in 19 cities and towns.

RHODE ISLAND — There’s a good chance “forever chemicals” that have been linked to cancer and other health problems will flow along with the water when Rhode Island residents turn on their taps, according to a new government study.
The synthetic compounds known collectively as PFAS are contaminating drinking water to varying extents in large cities and small towns — and in private wells and public systems, according to the study released Wednesday by the U.S. Geological Survey. Based on the data, the researchers estimated that at least one form of PFAS could be found in about 45 percent of tap water samples nationwide.
The researchers described the study as the first nationwide effort to test for PFAS in tap water in private and regulated public water sources. It builds on previous scientific findings that the chemicals are widespread, showing up in consumer products as diverse as nonstick pans, food packaging and water-resistant clothing and making their way into water supplies.
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The researchers focused on 716 locations where forever chemicals were detected from 2016-2021, including 447 that rely on public supplies and 269 using private wells. They were collected from private residents but also from a few schools and businesses. The samples were taken from protected lands such as national parks, residential and rural areas with no identified PFAS sources, and urban centers or waste sites known to generate PFAS.
In Rhode Island, forever chemicals were found in water supplies in the following cities and towns:
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- Burrillville
- Charlestown
- Coventry
- Cumberland
- Exeter
- Foster
- Glocester
- Hopkinton
- Little Compton
- Middletown
- Newport
- North Kingstown
- North Smithfield
- Pawtucket
- Scituate
- South Kingstown
- Tiverton
- Westerly
- West Warwick.
The researchers emphasized they aren’t the only U.S. locations with PFAS. Also, they noted although most taps were sampled just once, three tested multiple times across three months had consistent results, lead author Kelly Smalling, a research hydrologist, told The Associated Press.
Scientists tested for 32 PFAS compounds — most detectable through available methods. Thousands of others are believed to exist but can't be spotted with current technology, Smalling said.
The heaviest exposures were in cities and near potential sources of the compounds, particularly in the Eastern Seaboard; Great Lakes and Great Plains urban centers; and Central and Southern California. Many of the tests, mostly in rural areas, found no PFAS.
As a scientific research agency, the USGS doesn’t make policy recommendations. But the information in the study “can be used to evaluate the risk of exposure and inform decisions about whether or not you want to treat your drinking water, get it tested or get more information from your state,” Smalling told the AP.
In March, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed the first federal drinking water limits on PFAS, or per- and polyfluorinated substances, which remain in the human body for years and don't degrade in the environment. A final decision is expected later this year or in 2024.
But the government hasn’t stopped companies that use the chemicals from dumping them into public wastewater systems, Scott Faber, a senior vice president of the Environmental Working Group, an advocacy organization, told The AP.
“We should be treating this problem where it begins, instead of putting up a stoplight after the accident,” Faber said. “We should be requiring polluters to treat their own wastes.”
States have adopted a patchwork of PFAS-related regulations. In Rhode Island, there is a ban against adding PFAs to food containers. The state also in 2022 set a limit on PFAS in the drinking water supply to 20 parts per trillion. The new rule required public water testing by July 1.
The EWG previously identified 2,858 locations in 50 states and two territories where PFAS have been found in public and private water systems. A searchable map helps people find out if PFAS have been detected where they live.
Reporting by The Associated Press, which receives support for climate and environmental coverage from several private foundations
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