Hexavalent chromium found in tap water from 31 U.S. cities

Monday, December 20th, 2010 By

enemy of chromium-6

Erin Brockovich made hexavalent chromium famous with her $330 million lawsuit against Pacific Gas and Electric. Image: CC public.resource.org/Flickr

A cancer-causing chemical has been detected in drinking water samples from numerous U.S. cities. A study released by the Environmental Working Group released Monday found that hexavalent chromium contaminated municipal water supplies in 31 of 35 cities tested. Hexavalent chromium, also known as chromium-6, achieved notoriety in the movie “Erin Brockovich.”

Why hexavalent chromium is hazardous

Hexavalent chromium is dumped into the environment by steel and pulp mills, metal-plating and leather-tanning industries, according to the Environmental Working Group. EWG paid labs to test drinking water in 35 cities known to be contaminated by the cancer-causing chemical, which leaches into groundwater from eroding soil. An EWG scientist said evidence has been well-documented that a corollary exists between exposure to chromium-6 and stomach cancer in humans.The highest levels of hexavalent chromium were found in Norman, Okla., Honolulu, Hawaii, Riverside, Calif., Madison, Wis., and San Jose, Calif.

The chromium-6 study

The EWG study is the first nationwide assessment of hexavalent chromium in municipal water supplies. The study was made public as the Environmental Protection Agency considers a regulatory limit for chromium-6 in tap water. The National Institutes of Health classified hexavalent chromium a probable carcinogen in 2008. In 2009, California proposed a safe limit of hexavalent chromium levels in drinking water at 0.06 parts per billion. The EWG study found that in Norman public drinking water exceeded that limit by 200 times. Of the 35 cities in the study, 25 exceeded the proposed California limit.

EWG recommends reverse osmosis water filters

Hexavalent chromium is the cancer-causing chemical that starred in the movie “Erin Brockovich”. Brockovich, a real person, successfully sued Pacific Gas and Electric for contaminating the water supply of Hinckley, Calif., with chromium 6. The utility company paid more than $330 million in damages. Until the EPA regulates hexavalent chromium in drinking water, the EWG suggests a water filter. “Reverse osmosis” water filters are designed to remove heavy metals, including chromium, from drinking water. Reverse osmosis water filters can cost anywhere from about $120 to $300.

Sources

CNN

USA Today

Medical News Today

Previous Article

« Discriminatory FHA loans could have cost Baltimore borrowers

Several community organizing groups have made the charge that 2008 FHA loans in Baltimore were discriminatory. What does the evidence say? Paperwork
Next Article

Julian Assange police report leaked; legal team enraged »

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's legal team is outraged because of the release of their client's supposedly confidential police report ... File photo of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange at a book signing.

This post has one comment

  1. Vidhata says:

    Who cares about what is happening in the US? Report something about the water supplied here that is slowly killing people.

Trackbacks / Pingbacks

Leave a Reply

Other recent posts by Thomas Hart

Administration: Principal reduction keeps foreclosures in check

The regulator for Fannie and Freddie won't let the agencies participate in principal reduction to stem a rising tide of underwater mortgages.
another foreclosure, more to come

New Fed proposal takes aim at excessive debit card swipe fees

The Fed wants to bring swipe fees closer to what it costs banks to process debit card transactions, as required in the financial reform bill.
fed swipe fee limits

Record foreclosure drop in November credited to robo-signers

Fewer people lost their homes to foreclosure in November, but it was because banks backed off to deal with the robo-signing controversy ...
bank reposessions