|   |  Congress Members Question Pentagon’s Delay in ‘Forever Chemical’ Cleanup
  A  bipartisan group of lawmakers has asked the military to explain why  cleanup of PFAS chemicals at bases nationwide has been pushed back.
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   PFAS have been widely used in firefighting foam on military bases. An exercise at Cannon Air Force Base, N.M., in 2022.Credit...NB/TRAN, via Alamy
     By  Hiroko Tabuchi
  Oct. 22, 2025Updated 4:03 p.m. ET
  Three  dozen members of Congress, including two Republicans, asked Wednesday  that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth explain why the Pentagon has pushed  back its cleanup of “forever chemical” contamination at nearly 140  military sites nationwide.
   The New York Times reported  last month that the Department of Defense had delayed its cleanup  efforts of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, known as PFAS, which are  used in firefighting foam at military installations across the country.  The chemicals are linked to serious diseases including cancer.
  The  delays extended the timelines for cleanup of contaminated water and  soil by an average of five years, and in some cases by almost a decade.
  In a  letter to Mr. Hegseth,  the 36 lawmakers, led by Democrats Debbie Dingell of Michigan and  Teresa Leger Fernández of New Mexico, said they were “alarmed” to learn  of the delays reported by The Times. Two Republican members of Congress,  Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Mike Lawler of New York, also  signed the letter.
  “For  years, our defense communities have suffered from the consequences of  this contamination,” the letter said. “The DOD has a serious  responsibility to these communities, including service members and their  families.”
  In a statement, Ciro  Riccardi, the communications director for Representative Lawler said  “PFAS contamination has a devastating impact on military families and  surrounding communities across the country.”
   
  
  Defense Department Delays Cleanup of ‘Forever Chemicals’ Nationwide
   The  new timeline could slow cleanup in some communities by nearly a decade.  The chemicals, widely used in the military, are linked to cancers and  other health risks.
   Sept. 23, 2025
  The Defense Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
  In  an earlier statement to The Times, Pentagon Press Secretary Kingsley  Wilson attributed the delays to “an evolving understanding of PFAS  conditions at our military installations and additional investigation”  based on more stringent  drinking-water standards  that the federal government introduced last year. The military remained  “committed to addressing PFAS and remains transparent” about its  efforts, Ms. Wilson said.
  A growing  body of research has linked PFAS exposure to increased cancer risks,  adverse reproductive effects and developmental effects or delays in  children.
  PFAS  contamination at military sites was for the first time publicly  reported in 2010 at the shuttered Wurtsmith Air Force Base in Michigan.  Since then, military communities nationwide have reported alarming  levels of the chemicals in drinking water.
  Defense  officials say 723 military installations and their surrounding  communities across the nation are or may be contaminated with PFAS  chemicals. Its efforts to start cleaning up the chemicals have been  hampered by the immense scale of contamination, as well as the lack of  readily available cleanup technology.
  Ultimately, the cleanup could take decades and cost billions of dollars, officials say.
  In  an interview, New Mexico congresswoman Teresa Leger Fernández, whose  constituency includes the contaminated Cannon Air Force Base, southwest  of Clovis, N.M., said she had been blindsided by the cleanup delays.  PFAS from the base, first publicly reported in 2018, shut down a dairy  farm and affected local water supplies. Now, cleanup at the base has  been delayed by six more years.
  “Why  wasn’t there any communication with the communities that support these  bases?” she asked. “These aren’t communities that are hostile to the  bases, they’re communities that welcomed them.”
  More About PFAS Pollution 
  E.P.A. Keeps Polluters on the Hook to Clean Up ‘Forever Chemicals’ Sept. 18, 2025 
  Six Things to Know About ‘Forever Chemicals’ April 10, 2024 
  How Can I Get ‘Forever Chemicals’ Out of My Life? Oct. 7, 2024
   Hiroko Tabuchi covers pollution and the environment for The Times. She has been a journalist for more than 20 years in Tokyo and New York.
  See more on:  U.S. Department of Defens
  nytimes.com
  My comments:
  Groundwater around SeaTac International airport are contaminated with the stuff.
  Eric |  
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