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April 18, 2008

Study Say's Think Twice: Chicago Tap Water Contains Trace Chemicals

 
"I think that's awful, actually," Russell said. "You would imagine that water would be safe to drink, safe to bathe in."

 
CHICAGO (CBS) ― A new study by the Chicago Tribune might make you think twice before taking a drink of tap water. The report says you could be gulping down small amounts of drugs and chemicals along with that H2O.

As CBS 2's Mike Puccinelli reports, it's the second recent study that shows our water purification systems aren't filtering out everything.

Ryan Russell is one of the 7 million people in the Chicago area who drinks treated water from Lake Michigan – water that he's just learned still contains trace amounts of drugs and chemicals.

"I think that's awful, actually," Russell said. "You would imagine that water would be safe to drink, safe to bathe in."

And Chicago officials say it is, but a Tribune-financed study found tiny amounts of an anti-seizure medication, caffeine, acetaminophen and two chemicals used to make Teflon and Scotchguard in water it sampled.

The paper hired a lab to do the testing after the city refused to the testing on its own.

Commissioner Suzanne Malec-McKenna with the Chicago Department of Environment says Chicagoans should not worry about their tap water and that the trace amounts are incredibly small.

"One part per trillion is equivalent to one second in 32,000 years," Malec-McKenna said.

Still Malec-McKenna says the department is not taking the problem lightly.

"The fact that there are trace amounts of pharmaceuticals in our water is something that we all take very seriously and something we are looking to see when would it get to threshold of concern," she said.

Les Moshinsky is allergic to some antibiotics so he's concerned enough to call for new legislation.

He's doing his part by properly disposing of potentially hazardous household materials at one of the city's designated drop off sites.

"I had some chemicals I had accumulated like anti-freeze and I didn't want to throw them in the trash," Moshinsky said.

Tap water that was strained through a home purifier didn't turn up any contaminants, so that is an inexpensive option for Chicagoans concerned about their drinking water.

 
Source:http://cbs2chicago.com/local/tap.water.study.2.702852.html
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Where to find clean drinking water you can trust:  In California visit: www.TapWaterTruth.com  Outside California visit: www.FineWaterImports.com

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March 24, 2008

Tap Water Dangers Hidden From Public, Senators To Hold Hearings To Get The Truth

 
The Public Was Kept In The Dark About Drugs In The Water And Possible Health Risk.   Many cities were and are still touting how clean their tap water is and calling for the publics trust. Tap water advocates are trying to create a "return to the tap" movement, saying the drug tainted water is cheap and better for the environment, even if the real risk to health are unknown at this time.  U.S. senators now want the truth about …"what's really in the water?"
 
Pantagraph.com: Two veteran U.S. senators said they plan to hold hearings in response to an Associated Press investigation into the presence of trace amounts of pharmaceuticals in the drinking water supplies of at least 41 million Americans.

Also, U.S. Rep. Allyson Schwartz, D-Pa., has asked the EPA to establish a national task force to investigate the issue and make recommendations to Congress on any legislative actions needed.

Sen. Barbara Boxer, who heads the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, and Sen. Frank Lautenberg, chairman of the Transportation, Safety, Infrastructure Security and Water Quality Subcommittee, said the oversight hearings would likely be held in April.

Boxer, D-Calif., said she was “alarmed at the news” that pharmaceuticals are turning up in the nation’s drinking water, while Lautenberg, a New Jersey Democrat who said he was “deeply concerned” by the AP findings.

Both represent states where pharmaceuticals had been detected in drinking water supplies, but not disclosed to the public.

EPA spokesman Timothy Lyons said the agency is “committed to keeping the nation’s water supply clean, safe and the best in the world. We encourage all Americans to be responsible when disposing of prescription drugs.”

The Lautenberg-Boxer announcement came just 24 hours after the AP’s release of the first installment of its three-part series, titled PharmaWater.

The five-month-long inquiry by the AP National Investigative Team found that while water is screened for drugs by some suppliers, they usually don’t tell their customers that they have found medication in it.

The series shows how drugs — mostly the residue of medications taken by people, excreted and flushed down the toilet — have gotten into the water supplies of at least 24 major metropolitan areas.

 
Source:http://www.pantagraph.com/articles/2008/03/23/news/
doc47e7068018f50306783571.txt:
 
Where to find clean drinking water you can trust:  In California visit: www.TapWaterTruth.com  Outside California visit: www.FineWaterImports.com
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March 18, 2008

Pink Tap Water? Chemical Over-Feed By Water Company Say's Health Department

"It turns pink and if you let it sit it will turn brown, which isn't good either," said McManus.

Colorado Springs USA: Imagine turning on the faucet at home and instead of clean, clear water coming out, it runs pink. Amanda McManus of Peyton says it happened to her family. They've had strange colored water for nearly a week.

"It turns pink and if you let it sit it will turn brown, which isn't good either," said McManus.

She says because she doesn't know what's making the water pink she is afraid to use it, "Taking a bath is even scary."

McManus said she made several calls to her water company–Bobcat Meadows Metro District. She says her calls did no good. The water is still coming out pink and she is worried. "I don't know the effects of it. I don't know what's in it. I don't know why it's different colors," said McManus.

After News First made several calls to Bobcat Meadows Metro District the company said that nobody was available for comment. However, the El Paso County Health Department says they've heard from the company.

"They had a chemical over-feed and it tends to cause the water to turn a little bit pink and a little bit sweet," said Mike McCarthy of the El Paso County Health Department.

McCarthy says the chemical that was over-fed into the water is not harmful. He also says the company is fixing the problem. "They're pretty close to having it rectified," he said.

McCarthy says people who see strange colors in their water should report it both to the health department and to their water company.

Source:http://www.koaa.com:80/aaaa_top_stories/x408980272

Where to find clean drinking water you can trust:  In California visit: www.TapWaterTruth.com  Outside California visit: www.FineWaterImports.com

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March 13, 2008

How Tiny Amounts Of Drugs In Tap Water May Impact Human Cells

Ingesting tiny scant amounts of drugs could have powerful effect, experiment shows

Troubled by drugs discovered in European waters, poisons expert and biologist Francesco Pomati set up an experiment: He exposed developing human kidney cells to a mixture of 13 drugs at levels mimicking those found in Italian rivers.

There were drugs to fight high cholesterol and blood pressure, seizures and depression, pain and infection, and cancer, all in tiny amounts.

The result: The pharmaceutical blend slowed cell growth by up to a third — suggesting that scant amounts may exert powerful effects, said Pomati, who works at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia.

Taken alone, this was a modest study. But in fact Pomati’s work is part of a body of emerging scientific studies that indicate that over time, humans could be harmed by ingesting drinking water contaminated with tiny amounts of pharmaceuticals.

In another recently published study, Pomati discovered that some of those pharmaceuticals could amplify — or reverse — the effects of some others.

For example, the cholesterol drug bezafibrate and asthma drug salbutamol each seem to stimulate cell growth. Combined in the laboratory, they slowed it way down. The same cholesterol drug appeared to make cells more sensitive to harm from the antibiotic fluoroquinolone.

And Pomati’s work indicates some drugs cause cellular effects at scant concentrations that — strangely — cannot be seen at higher levels.

Such findings are preliminary; they alone cannot demonstrate the same effects within the human body. But they provide scientific hints, just like cellular experiments that routinely guide discovery of new drugs.

Estrogen risks


They also heighten worry about the possible effects on especially vulnerable groups, like the very young, old or sick. “My wife is pregnant, and I don’t let my wife drink the water … where I know that there are pollutants like pharmaceuticals in concentrations that are detectable and in mixtures that are complex,” said Pomati.

Elsewhere in the world, other researchers are finding results similar to Pomati’s.

In research awaiting publication, human breast cancer cells grew twice as fast when exposed to estrogens taken from catfish caught near untreated sewage overflows in Pennsylvania, compared with other fish.

The University of Pittsburgh researchers didn’t calculate how much effect came from pharmaceuticals instead of natural hormones, but their earlier work points to birth-control pills and hormone treatments as important contributors, said lead researcher Conrad Volz.

“There is the potential for an increased risk for those people who are prone to estrogenic cancer,” said Volz, who studies environmental hazards at the university’s Cancer Institute.

 

He said people who regularly drink water containing low levels of hormones may be at higher risk, since they would presumably consume more of these drugs than those who only occasionally eat such fish.

'Kaleidoscope of chemicals'


Scientists at the Helmholtz research center in Leipzig, Germany, linked low levels of the pain reliever diclofenac to an inflammatory-like response in human blood cells, according to biologist Kristin Schirmer. Inflammation at the wrong time and place plays a role in conditions ranging from infections and arthritis to heart disease.

Sandra Steingraber, a biologist at New York’s Ithaca College, adds that many efforts to determine how trace drugs affect humans don’t fully consider the whole range of pharmaceuticals in the environment and whether someone has been exposed at more susceptible times, like during childhood or old age.

“The timing makes the poison as much as the dose,” she said. “And the dose itself is not the dose from just any one thing — it’s from this whole kaleidoscope of chemicals.”

Taking notice of accumulating evidence, the drug industry has backed studies of its own in recent years that have found very slight, if any, risk to humans.

“They miss some of the big issues. Our research shows mixtures are so prevalent,” said Dana Kolpin, a U.S. Geological Survey water expert who launched a plethora of research in 2002 after finding pharmaceuticals in most samples taken from 139 streams in 30 states. “If there are any cumulative or additive issues, you can’t just dismiss things so quickly.”

Also, the studies usually ignore what might happen to people exposed to the complex combinations of medicines that are often found in drinking water.

Then, there are the byproducts of the drugs. When medications are digested and processed through water treatment plants, they may take a new metabolic form.

Even if Kolpin is right, the industry may be focusing on the wrong pharmaceuticals, said chemist James Shine at the Harvard School of Public Health, who oversaw what’s probably the broadest risk review yet, a yet-to-be-published study covering scores of the most common drugs sold in the United States.

As suspected, some chemotherapy drugs turn up high on that list. But blood-pressure diuretics, though rarely considered, appear to pose more risk than many drugs more often evaluated.

Even when researchers downplay risk, that may not be the final word.

People “are going to be concerned about being medicated by mandate when you turn on the tap,” said Dr. Stevan Gressitt, a psychiatrist who’s led a push for a program in Maine that allows consumers to turn in unused pharmaceuticals for secure disposal or destruction. “And that’s going to be seen if the level is (only) one molecule in 100 taps.”

Source:http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23558785/

Where to find clean drinking water you can trust:  In California visit: www.TapWaterTruth.com  Outside California visit: www.FineWaterImports.com

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March 11, 2008

Tap Water Drug Probe Sparks Senate Hearings. Drugs Were Detected But Not Disclosed To Public

 
Pharmaceuticals in the drinking water supplies of at least 41 million Americans. …Lautenberg, a New Jersey Democrat who said he was "deeply concerned" by the AP findings, both represent states where pharmaceuticals had been detected in drinking water supplies, but not disclosed to the public.

The AP National Investigative Team

Two veteran U.S. senators said they plan to hold hearings in response to an Associated Press investigation into the presence of trace amounts of pharmaceuticals in the drinking water supplies of at least 41 million Americans.

Also, U.S. Rep. Allyson Schwartz, D-Pa., has asked the EPA to establish a national task force to investigate the issue and make recommendations to Congress on any legislative actions needed.

Sen. Barbara Boxer, who heads the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, and Sen. Frank Lautenberg, chairman of the Transportation, Safety, Infrastructure Security and Water Quality Subcommittee, said Monday the oversight hearings would likely be held in April.

Boxer, D-Calif., said she was "alarmed at the news" that pharmaceuticals are turning up in the nation's drinking water, while Lautenberg, a New Jersey Democrat who said he was "deeply concerned" by the AP findings, both represent states where pharmaceuticals had been detected in drinking water supplies, but not disclosed to the public.

"I call on the EPA to take whatever steps are necessary to keep our communities safe," said Boxer in a statement.

Added Lautenberg, whose subcommittee has jurisdiction over drinking water issues: "Our families deserve water that is clean and safe. Our hearing will examine these problems and help ensure the EPA and Congress take the steps necessary to protect our residents and clean up our water supply."

EPA spokesman Timothy Lyons said the agency is "committed to keeping the nation's water supply clean, safe and the best in the world. We encourage all Americans to be responsible when disposing of prescription drugs."

The Lautenberg-Boxer announcement came just 24 hours after the AP's release of the first installment of its three-part series, titled PharmaWater.

The five-month-long inquiry by the AP National Investigative Team found that while water is screened for drugs by some suppliers, they usually don't tell their customers that they have found medication in it, including antibiotics, anti-convulsants, mood stabilizers and sex hormones.

The series shows how drugs — mostly the residue of medications taken by people, excreted and flushed down the toilet — have gotten into the water supplies of at least 24 major metropolitan areas, from Southern California to northern New Jersey. The stories also detail the growing concerns among scientists that this pollution has adversely affected wildlife, and may threaten human health.

In a letter to EPA administrator Stephen Johnson, Schwartz said, "Like many Pennsylvanians, I was especially taken aback by the finding of 56 different pharmaceuticals discovered in the drinking water for the City of Philadelphia.. . . The Associated Press report raises serious questions about the safety and security of America's water system."

The AP National Investigative Team

Source:http://ap.google.com:80/article/ALeqM5ipVx85Nbcbz3VNRF9_kzSkcCKukwD8VB3BI00

Where to find clean drinking water you can trust:  In California visit: www.TapWaterTruth.com  Outside California visit: www.FineWaterImports.com

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