Do you have pesticides in your water?
October 01, 2013
0 Comments
Under the safe drinking water act which was first passed in 1974, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) set levels for pesticides in drinking water and required utilities to monitor these levels. So, all is safe, peachy and good right? Well, not quite. Consider this:
- Maximum Contaminant Levels (MCL's) are "adjusted" to ensure technical and financial feasibility. Translation: If it costs too much to reach a certain level of contaminant, then we will raise the level.
- The EPA does not have enforceable MCLs for cyanazine, metolachlor and acetochlor, which are three of the major pesticides used in the USA. They do have MCL enforceable levels for atrazine, alachlor and simazine, however.
- Some monitoring programs ignore "spikes" in pesticides and just revert to reporting "average" levels which oftentimes are dramatically below the actual amount. This falls under the category that figures don't lie, but liars figure.
Tags:
Leave a comment
Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.