Toxic ‘Forever Chemicals’ Taint Rural California Drinking Water, Far From Known Sources

Lambert here: “Sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids.”

By Hannah Norman, video producer and visual reporter, who joined KFF Health News after covering health care for the San Francisco Business Times. Previously, she was a fellow at AtlanticLIVE, The Atlantic’s event branch. Originally published at KFF Health News.

Juana Valle never imagined she’d be scared to drink water from her tap or eat fresh eggs and walnuts when she bought her 5-acre farm in San Juan Bautista, California, three years ago. Escaping city life and growing her own food was a dream come true for the 52-year-old.

Then Valle began to suspect water from her well was making her sick.

“Even if everything is organic, it doesn’t matter, if the water underground is not clean,” Valle said.

This year, researchers found worrisome levels of chemicals called PFAS in her well water. Exposure to PFAS, a group of thousands of compounds, has been linked to health problems including cancer, decreased response to vaccines, and low birth weight, according to a federally funded report by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Valle worries that eating food from her farm and drinking the water, found also to contain arsenic, are to blame for health issues she’s experienced recently.

The researchers suspect the toxic chemicals could have made their way into Valle’s water through nearby agricultural operations, which may have used PFAS-laced fertilizers made from dried sludge from wastewater treatment plants, or pesticides found to contain the compounds.

The chemicals have unexpectedly turned up in well water in rural farmland far from known contamination sites, like industrial areas, airports, and military bases. Agricultural communities already face the dangers of heavy metals and nitrates contaminating their tap water. Now researchers worry that PFAS could further harm farmworkers and communities of color disproportionately. They have called for more testing.

“It seems like it’s an even more widespread problem than we realized,” said Clare Pace, a researcher at the University of California-Berkeley who is examining possible exposure from PFAS-contaminated pesticides.

Stubborn Sludge

Concerns are mounting nationwide about PFAS contamination transferred through the common practice of spreading solid waste from sewage treatment across farm fields. Officials in Maine outlawed spreading “biosolids,” as some sewage byproducts are called, on farms and other land in 2022. A study published in August found higher levels of PFAS in the blood of people in Maine who drank water from wells next to farms where biosolids were spread.

Contamination in sewage mostly comes from industrial discharges. But household sludge also contains PFAS because the chemicals are prevalent in personal care products and other commonly used items, said Sarah Alexander, executive director of the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association.

“We found that farms that were spread with sludge in the ’80s are still contaminated today,” Alexander said.

The first PFAS, or perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, were invented in the 1940s to prevent stains and sticking in household products. Today, PFAS chemicals are used in anything from cookware to cosmetics to some types of firefighting foam — ending up in landfills and wastewater treatment plants. Known as “forever chemicals” because they don’t break down in the environment, PFAS are so toxic that in water they are measured in parts per trillion, equivalent to one drop in 20 Olympic-size swimming pools. The chemicals accumulate in the human body.

On Valle’s farm, her well water has PFAS concentrations eight times as high as the safety threshold the Environmental Protection Agency set this year for the PFAS chemical referred to as PFOS, or perfluorooctane sulfonate. It’s unclear whether the new drinking water standards, which are in a five-year implementation phase, will be enforced by the incoming Trump administration.

Valle’s well is one of 20 sites tested in California’s San Joaquin Valley and Central Coast regions — 10 private domestic wells and 10 public water systems — in the first round of preliminary sampling by UC-Berkeley researchers and the Community Water Center, a clean-water nonprofit. They’re planning community meetings to discuss the findings with residents when the results are finalized. Valle’s results showed 96 parts per trillion of total PFAS in her water, including 32 ppt of PFOS — both considered potentially hazardous amounts.

Hailey Shingler, who was part of the team that conducted the water sampling, said the sites’ proximity to farmland suggests agricultural operations could be a contamination source, or that the chemicals have become ubiquitous in the environment.

The EPA requires public water systems serving at least 3,300 people to test for 29 types of PFAS. But private wells are unregulated and particularly vulnerable to contamination from groundwater because they tend to be shallower and construction quality varies, Shingler said.

A Strain on the Water Supply

California already faces a drinking water crisis that disproportionately hits farmworkers and communities of color. More than 825,000 people spanning almost 400 water systems across the state don’t have access to clean or reliable drinking water because of contamination from nitrates, heavy metals, and pesticides.

California’s Central Valley is one of the nation’s biggest agricultural producers. State data shows the EPA found PFAS contamination above the new safety threshold in public drinking water supplies in some cities there: Fresno, Lathrop, Manteca, and others.

Not long after she moved, Valle started feeling sick. Joints in her legs hurt, and there was a burning sensation. Medical tests revealed her blood had high levels of heavy metals, especially arsenic, she said. She plans to get herself tested for PFAS soon, too.

“So I stopped eating [or drinking] anything from the farm,” Valle said, “and a week later my numbers went down.”

After that, she got a water filter installed for her house, but the system doesn’t remove PFAS, so she and her family continue to drink bottled water, she said.

In recent years, the pesticide industry has increased its use of PFAS for both active and “inert” ingredients, said David Andrews, a senior scientist of the Environmental Working Group, who analyzed pesticide ingredient registrations submitted to the EPA over the past decade as part of a recently published study.

“PFAS not only endanger agricultural workers and communities,” Andrews said, “but also jeopardize downstream water sources, where pesticide runoff can contaminate drinking supplies.”

California’s most concentrated pesticide use is along the Central Coast, where Valle lives, and in the Central Valley, said Pace, whose research found that possible PFAS contamination from pesticides disproportionately affects communities of color.

“Our results indicate racial and ethnic disparities in potential PFAS threats to community water systems, thus raising environmental justice concerns,” the paper states.

Spotty Solutions

Some treatment plants and public water systems have installed filtration systems to catch PFAS, but that can cost millions or even billions of dollars. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, signed laws restricting PFAS in textiles, food packaging, and cosmetics, a move the wastewater treatment industry hopes will address the problem at the source.

Yet the state, like the EPA, does not regulate PFAS in the solid waste generated by sewage treatment plants, though it does require monitoring.

In the past, biosolids were routinely sent to landfills alongside being spread on land. But in 2016, California lawmakers passed a regulation that requested operators to lower their organic waste disposal by 75% by 2025 to reduce methane emissions. That squeeze pushed facilities to repurpose more of their wastewater treatment byproducts as fertilizer, compost, and soil topper on farm fields, forests, and other sites.

Greg Kester, director of renewable resource programs at the California Association of Sanitation Agencies, said there are benefits to using biosolids as fertilizer, including improved soil health, increased crop yields, reduced irrigation needs, and carbon sequestration. “We have to look at the risk of not applying [it on farmland] as well,” he said.

Almost two-thirds of the 776,000 dry metric tons of biosolids California used or disposed of last year was spread this way, most of it hauled from wealthy, populated regions like Los Angeles County and the Bay Area to the Central Valley or out of state.

When asked if California would consider banning biosolids from agricultural use, Wendy Linck, a senior engineering geologist at California’s State Water Resources Control Board, said: “I don’t think that is in the future.”

Average PFAS concentrations found in California’s sampling of biosolids for PFAS collected by wastewater treatment plants are relatively low compared with more industrialized states like Maine, said Rashi Gupta, wastewater practice director at consulting firm Carollo Engineers.

Still, according to monitoring done in 2020 and 2022, San Francisco’s two wastewater treatment facilities produced biosolid samples with total PFAS levels of more than 150 parts per billion.

Starting in 2019, the water board began testing wells — and finding high levels of PFAS — near known sites of contamination, like airports, landfills, and industry.

The agency is now testing roughly 4,000 wells statewide, including those far from known contamination sources — free of charge in disadvantaged communities, according to Dan Newton, assistant deputy director at the state water board’s division of drinking water. The effort will take about two years.

Solano County — home to large pastures about an hour northeast of San Francisco — tested soil where biosolids had been applied to its fields, most of which came from the Bay Area. In preliminary results, consultants found PFAS at every location, including places where biosolids had historically not been applied. In recent years, landowners expressed reservations about the county’s biosolids program, and in 2024 no farms participated in the practice, said Trey Strickland, manager of the environmental health services division.

“It was probably a ‘not in my backyard’ kind of thing,” Strickland said. “Spread the poop somewhere else, away from us.”

Los Angeles County, meanwhile, hauls much of its biosolids to Kern County or out of state. Green Acres, a farm near Bakersfield and owned by the city of Los Angeles, has applied as much as 80,000 dry tons of biosolids annually, fertilizing crops for animal feed like corn and wheat. Concerned about the environmental and health implications, for more than a decade Kern County fought the practice until the legal battle ended in 2017. At the time, Dean Florez, a former state senator, told the Los Angeles Times that “it’s been a David and Goliath battle from Day One.”

“We probably won’t know the effects of this for many years,” he added. “We do know one thing: If it was healthy and OK, L.A. would do it in L.A. County.”

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About Lambert Strether

Readers, I have had a correspondent characterize my views as realistic cynical. Let me briefly explain them. I believe in universal programs that provide concrete material benefits, especially to the working class. Medicare for All is the prime example, but tuition-free college and a Post Office Bank also fall under this heading. So do a Jobs Guarantee and a Debt Jubilee. Clearly, neither liberal Democrats nor conservative Republicans can deliver on such programs, because the two are different flavors of neoliberalism (“Because markets”). I don’t much care about the “ism” that delivers the benefits, although whichever one does have to put common humanity first, as opposed to markets. Could be a second FDR saving capitalism, democratic socialism leashing and collaring it, or communism razing it. I don’t much care, as long as the benefits are delivered. To me, the key issue — and this is why Medicare for All is always first with me — is the tens of thousands of excess “deaths from despair,” as described by the Case-Deaton study, and other recent studies. That enormous body count makes Medicare for All, at the very least, a moral and strategic imperative. And that level of suffering and organic damage makes the concerns of identity politics — even the worthy fight to help the refugees Bush, Obama, and Clinton’s wars created — bright shiny objects by comparison. Hence my frustration with the news flow — currently in my view the swirling intersection of two, separate Shock Doctrine campaigns, one by the Administration, and the other by out-of-power liberals and their allies in the State and in the press — a news flow that constantly forces me to focus on matters that I regard as of secondary importance to the excess deaths. What kind of political economy is it that halts or even reverses the increases in life expectancy that civilized societies have achieved? I am also very hopeful that the continuing destruction of both party establishments will open the space for voices supporting programs similar to those I have listed; let’s call such voices “the left.” Volatility creates opportunity, especially if the Democrat establishment, which puts markets first and opposes all such programs, isn’t allowed to get back into the saddle. Eyes on the prize! I love the tactical level, and secretly love even the horse race, since I’ve been blogging about it daily for fourteen years, but everything I write has this perspective at the back of it.

18 comments

  1. upstater

    Why is this not surprising?

    Their Fertilizer Poisons Farmland. Now, They Want Protection From Lawsuits. NYT archive

    A company controlled by Goldman Sachs is helping to lead a lobbying effort by makers of fertilizer linked to “forever chemicals.”

    In a letter to the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works in March, sludge-industry lobbyists argued that they shouldn’t be held liable because the chemicals were already in the sludge before they received it and made it into fertilizer.

    The lobbying has found early success. A bill introduced by Senators John Boozman of Arkansas and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, both Republicans, would protect sludge companies like Synagro, as well as the wastewater plants that provide the sludge, from lawsuits. A House bill has also been introduced.

    1. mrsyk

      Lol, “Blanket Pardons all around, lads!” Giving blankets a bad name, says I. These lobbyists and their sugar daddy bankers read about The Adjuster yet?

  2. Wukchumni

    There’s a Sierra foothill town south of us named Glenville, whose entire water supply underfoot was contaminated by PFAS a quarter century ago…

    Glenville, California is located in northern Kern County in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, in a transition zone to higher elevation bedrock. An underground storage tank (UST) at 10675 Highway 155 contaminated a fractured bedrock aquifer in Glennville with MTBE in 1997. The fueling system, consisting of one 6000 gallon UST, fuel dispensers and related piping, was removed from the site in August 2002. Groundwater monitoring program consisting of quarterly sampling of up to 44 monitoring wells has been in effect at Glennville since July 1997. In addition to MTBE, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylenes (BTEX), and total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) have typically been detected in certain study area wells.

    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3327512/

  3. Jabura Basadai

    Reverse Osmosis – R/O the only way to go to be assured there’s no poisons in your water – there are so many more harmful substances whether city dweller or well-drinking country folks that an R/O system is essential –

    1. Felix

      I hadn’t heard of R/O, I did a quick read on Wikipedia, appears relatively inexpensive but I’m sure attempts to implement it would be met with widespread resistance in the manner that anything that helps non-wealthy citizens is opposed. thank you for this.

  4. MichaelSF

    20+ years ago I took a class at a rural home in Grass Valley CA (between Sacramento and Reno). The person conducting the class mentioned that he and his neighbors were dealing with toxic chemicals in their well water. They couldn’t say for sure, but thought (based on the chemicals) that they were from a mining operation that I gathered was 15-20 miles away. Of course the mining company said “couldn’t possibly be us”. I guess chemicals were leaching into the aquifer and traveling that long distance. It sounded like they didn’t see any possibility of rectifying the problem at the source and were going to be stuck treating/replacing the water from their wells.

  5. MicaT

    According to the epa, PFAS can be absorbed through the skin our largest organ.
    IE showers.
    Also showers have the added issue of steam or aerosols of water and whatever is in it.
    So good they are drinking clean water but they need RO for the showers.

  6. Michael McK

    Small amounts have been found in my local wild and scenic river. No clue where from. Water providers fear expensive monitoring could be on the horizon. Why all the questionable toxic substances have not been banned is humanity’s greatest market failure.

  7. Rabbit

    Hippies knew Teflon was poison. If they knew than how come our esteemed scientists in charge of our safety didn’t know? Well, they did know.
    FDA knew for decades the stuff was poison.
    After DuPont used a pond for it’s waste near Parkersburg, WV, a guy named Tennant, his cows started dying with all kinds of nasty symptoms including lesions on their livers. He contacted WVDEP and WVDNR. These were the people who should have raised the alarm but they walked away and did nothing. He hired a lawyer named Robert Billot who did a ground breaking study which was once on the internet. It’s a long read made for people like me.
    They went to trial and won. Settlement included health monitoring and treatment of the people in the area. Their birth defects and other effects are well documented. Still the EPA did little and are still doing little.
    Replacements for PFAS haven’t been studied properly and EPA still takes chemical industry word above verifying safety. The same as FDA does for drug companies. For drugs this compliance regime fails 1/3 of the time.
    This is going to be worse than DDT and asbestos put together. The reason it’s going to be worse is because DuPont and Dow have more say than citizens. It and it’s poisonous replacements are still being made with no regard for public safety.
    Unit parts per trillion have been shown to cause endocrine damage. There’s no place on earth that isn’t poisoned. It’s unsafe to eat anything, even polar bear meat. It all has PFAS in it.
    Not even rich people are safe. In fact, they’re more at risk because of their consumption habits.

    1. Felix

      Just read this after I commented below, Rabbit. Yeah even when we as the people win, we don’t really win. Kinda like sports, in the sense that a teams owners and players win, the fans only think we won something. very imperfect analogy to something very discouraging.

  8. Felix

    there’s a park in west oakland my granddaughter occasionally plays at. last time we were there a guy pointed out some manholes with EPA on them, explaining they used it to take readings of chemicals in the soil. the EPA learned about it after Caltrans workers who had begun preliminary work on expanding the freeway were overcome by fumes. turned out to be vinyl chloride from buried tanks circa WWll as well as some other noxious chemicals. a lady lives in the neighborhood who had asthma (like maybe 80% of the neighborhood) bulldogged it into being a Superfund site. I met the lady at a townhall later, Margaret Gordon. She told me that much of the soil was dug up and hauled to Socal. there was some type of natural addition to the polluted soil, weed or herb or whatever that removed the worst pollutants. she and her group insisted that it be used on the soil so the headache wasn’t just being moved elsewhere.
    to keep it real I’d read there’s something like 50 other badly polluted sites here. at least we had one success.

  9. Rabbit

    I wrote off the top of my head so there’s at least one mistake. It was 3M and DuPont not Dow and the Tennant lawsuit was separate from the class action also by Billot.
    The last Trump administration tried to censor a government report on PFAS. It was stated that it would be an embarrassment to certain agencies but coincidentally Trump appointees had close chemical industry ties.
    I’ve kept track of this for some time and it’s a tale of betrayal of citizens unrivaled in the effects. The coverup that continued in the Trump admin. Nobody could write a tale like this. Moriarty was a piker compared to the evil that exists in US politics.
    The Wiki on this is really interesting:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_events_related_to_per
    _and_polyfluoroalkyl_substances
    The full link is both lines.
    Put bacteria in a dish. They multiply and eventually suffocate in their own waste. Are humans smarter than bacteria?

  10. redleg

    Not all wells are the same. Is this a sandpoint? is the aquifer confined or unconfined? Fractured rock? Deep artesian? PVC cased?

    PFAS is soluble in water. If the biosolids have PFAS, the effluent removed from those solids has even more PFAS. Where did that water go?

Comments are closed.