The state of Vermont is offering well testing, free water and other support for southern Bennington and Shaftsbury in the wake of research last year that found PFAS contamination in the Bennington area has spread and worsened over time.
The Afternoon WireTrump calls off Iran strike planned for Tuesday to allow for ‘serious negotiations’McIlroy has angry exchange with fan at PGA. Rahm, Smith, Schauffele also fadeThe breathless Korean sci-fi monster movie 'Hope' leaves the Cannes Film Festival flooredFederal court rejects Elon Musk's claims against OpenAI, saying he filed his lawsuit too lateNipper, stay!
The future of a beloved dog statue on a New York warehouse is up in the airHow 2 men claimed an absurd record by driving an old 3-wheel car the length of AfricaAdults relive the musical camaraderie of their youth at band camps reprised for grown-upsHow a low angle and fast lens shaped a photo of Jannik SinnerThe World in PicturesWhen should you get a mammogram?
Conflicting advice makes it hard to knowOMS declara emergencia global de salud por ébola en la República Democrática del Congo y UgandaTech CEOs summoned to Congress for another hearing on social media's risks for childrenSuch great heights: They're tall, they're proud — and they're getting togetherPope and co-founder of Anthropic to launch pontiff's AI encyclical on May 25An America-themed prayer rally draws thousands to Washington's National Mall, in photosLIVE Neymar angry at being accidentally substituted in last match before Brazil announces World Cup squadCate Blanchett laments that the #MeToo movement 'got killed very quickly' in HollywoodAP Entertainment WireFederal court rejects Elon Musk's claims against OpenAI, saying he filed his lawsuit too lateNipper, stay!
The future of a beloved dog statue on a New York warehouse is up in the airHow 2 men claimed an absurd record by driving an old 3-wheel car the length of AfricaAdults relive the musical camaraderie of their youth at band camps reprised for grown-upsHow a low angle and fast lens shaped a photo of Jannik SinnerThe World in PicturesWhen should you get a mammogram?
Conflicting advice makes it hard to knowOMS declara emergencia global de salud por ébola en la República Democrática del Congo y UgandaTech CEOs summoned to Congress for another hearing on social media's risks for childrenSuch great heights: They're tall, they're proud — and they're getting togetherPope and co-founder of Anthropic to launch pontiff's AI encyclical on May 25Reddit The state of Vermont is offering well testing, free water and other support for southern Bennington and Shaftsbury in the wake of research last year that found PFAS contamination in the Bennington area has spread and worsened over time.
PFOA is a specific type of PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, which are a group of thousands of synthetic, toxic compounds that can be found in common items like cookware and sports gear. Unsafe levels of PFOA have been found in a great swath of private wells in the Bennington area.
Southern Bennington and Shaftsbury residents are looking into the possibility of legal redress, and the town of Shaftsbury wants the state to go further and provide blood testing after toxic chemical exposure. PFOA was recently detected in wells in southern Bennington and southeast Shaftsbury, meaning the plume of contamination has spread past the initial area of concern.
The PFOA continues to steadily seep into the soil, and groundwater contamination levels have by and large continued to rise in the Bennington area, according to, around three quarters of the private wells tested between 2016 and 2024 saw increased levels of PFAS in the eight-year time period. Residents in the Bennington region are still dealing with the consequences of these manmade chemicals leaching into the groundwater nearly a quarter century later, said David Bond, a Bennington College professor and one of the research leads on the project.
“PFAS is a generational disaster, and we’re only now starting to figure out what it means to respond to an environmental crisis of this scale and this durability,” Bond said. The state Department of Environmental Conservation is currently collecting private well water samples for households within the newly identified area of contamination, said Richard Spiese, a hazardous site manager with the department.
The state has identified around 250 wells in southern Bennington and 50 wells in Shaftsbury in need of testing, but not all households have responded to state outreach, Spiese said.to four parts per trillion, said Ben Montross, the department’s drinking water program manager. The state found private wells inwith PFOA levels as high as around 60 parts per trillion, 15 times the allowable limit.
Most impacted wells were between 20 and 30 parts per trillion, although no PFOA was detected in almost half the tested wells, wrote Spiese in an email. In the new area of concern, Spiese said the state is giving out bottled water or setting up filtration systems for homes with above the state’s new standard for contaminated drinking water.
Spiese said there are plans underway to connect the Southshire neighborhood to municipal water, and the ultimate goal is to connect all affected communities to public water that does not have PFAS contamination. A French multinational company called Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics Corporation bought the ChemFab factory in Bennington before it shut down in 2002.
The state of Vermont entered a, in which the corporation agreed to provide the bulk of funding necessary to connect Bennington households to municipal drinking water sourced from Morgan Springs. Attorney General Charity Clark wrote in a statement that the Agency of Natural Resources requested that Saint-Gobain conduct additional work in the new areas of contamination concern, but current settlement negotiations with the corporation are confidential.
In the meantime, lawyers Stephen Schwarz and David Silver also gathered around 100 residents in southern Bennington and southeast Shaftsbury, whose private wells lie in the new zone of contamination concern, to discuss the process for filing a class action lawsuit, as first Silver represented Bennington residents who received $34 million in financial compensation and medical monitoring support from Saint Gobain after a Schwarz successfully litigated class action lawsuits on behalf of residents of Hoosick Falls, New York, due to PFOA water contamination.
Under separate settlements, the companies Saint-Gobain, Honeywell International and Dupont agreed to pay out a total of over $90 million to Hoosick Falls residents for financial compensation and a medical monitoring program, according to recentBlood test results were helpful in previous settlements to argue that corporations are liable for exposure and should pay for citizens’ medical monitoring, Schwarz said in an interview. Blood tests are expensive and not readily available, he added, but are valuable in assessment of health risk factors like cancer for those exposed to PFOA.
The town of Shaftsbury is currently petitioning the state for free blood testing, which was provided for Bennington and North Bennington residents in 2016. In March, the state“PFAS is present in the blood of nearly all Americans, and a blood test cannot determine whether PFAS exposure will cause health problems, whether a condition was caused by PFAS, or how exposure occurred,” wrote Julie Moore, the secretary of the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources.
On April 21, the town of Shaftsbury Select Board members sent a letter back stating that the state’s reasoning is not aligned with scientific understanding of the risks of PFOA in the bloodstream. The town noted that the Environmental Protection Agency considers PFOA a probable human carcinogen.
The agency is currently rolling back Biden-area limits on PFAS levels in drinking water, according to The International Agency For Research on Cancer considers PFOA a human carcinogen, primarily due to sufficient evidence that the chemical potentially causes kidney cancer, the town wrote in the letter.
“There is no scientific, logical or fair reason to treat Shaftsbury residents any differently than Bennington residents with respect to state funded blood testing,” wrote the Shaftsbury Select Board members in the April letter. The Vermont Department of Health understands the community’s concerns, wrote spokesperson Kyle Casteel, but blood tests for PFOA levels are available through individual healthcare providers.
The state previously supported testing in 2016 to study and establish the link between concentrations of PFOA in blood and exposure of PFOA in drinking water for affected communities, Casteel wrote in an emailed statement.
“We continue to work with health care providers and the public to communicate about the risks of PFOA/PFAS exposure and support mitigation of those risks,” wrote Casteel.
Water Quality Pollution Lawsuits General News Vermont VT State Wire U.S. News Kyle Casteel Richard Spiese Health Julie Moore Ben Montross Morgan Springs Manufacturing Sector David Silver Associated Press Stephen Schwarz U.S. News
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Navajo Nation Winter Sunrise and Sunset Times Due to Daylight Saving TimeThe Navajo Nation in Graham County, Gila County, and Sierra County announces winter sunrise and sunset times due to Daylight Saving Time. The authorized driving hours are from Sunday at 11 AM MST until Sunday at 8 PM MST, for Eastern Pima-Southeastern Pinal-Santa Cruz-Western Cochise, Northern Graham-Northern Greenlee-White and Gila Mountains, Southern Graham-Central and Eastern Cochise-Southern Greenlee-Lower Elevations of the San Carlos Apache Nation in Graham County, Southern Gila County/Tonto National Forest Foothills. The authorized driving hours are from Sunday at 11 AM MST until Saturday at 8 PM MST, for White Mountains, Eastern Mogollon Rim, Little Colorado River Valley in Navajo County, Little Colorado River Valley in Coconino County, Marble and Glen Canyons, Grand Canyon Country, Kaibab Plateau, Little Colorado River Valley in Apache County, Western Mogollon Rim, Little Colorado River Valley in Apache County, Eastern Mogollon Rim, Little Colorado River Valley in Navajo County, Yavapai County Mountains, Coconino Plateau, Little Colorado River Valley in Coconino County. The authorized driving hours are from Saturday at 11 AM MST until Saturday at 8 PM MST, for Chinle Valley, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas South of Hwy 264, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas Hwy 264 Northward, Black Mesa Area, Chuska Mountains, Defiance Plateau, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas South of Hwy 264, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas Hwy 264 Northward, Black Mesa Area, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas South of Hwy 264, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas Hwy 264 Northward. The authorized driving hours are from Sunday at 12 PM MDT until Sunday at 9 PM MDT, for Chinle Valley, Suede Mountains, Valley Mountains South of I-40, Valles GMCs, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas South of Hwy 264, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas Hwy 264 Northward, Black Mesa Area, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas South of Hwy 264, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas Hwy 264 Northward, Black Mesa Area, Northeast Plateaus and Mesas South of Hwy 264.
Read more »
Navajo Nation Announces Winter Sunrise and Sunset Times Due to Daylight Saving TimeThe Navajo Nation in Graham County, Gila County, and Sierra County announces winter sunrise and sunset times due to Daylight Saving Time.
Read more »
EPA and HHS propose rescinding parts of Biden's PFAS limits in drinking waterThe EPA and the Department of Health and Human Services announced two new rules to address 'forever chemicals” in drinking water.
Read more »
EPA takes on PFAS, an annual EV fee proposal, and Russian oil waiverThe EPA alongside the HHS announced two new rules to address “forever chemicals” in drinking water.
Read more »
