Hawaii’s congressional delegation is calling for an investigation into the Navy’s response to firefighting foam spills at its World War II-era Red Hill fuel facility in Honolulu.
The lawmakers said on Monday that they want the U.S. Government Accountability Office to immediately look into a leak of an estimated 1,300 gallons of toxic firefighting foam concentrate at Red Hill earlier this month.
They are also pushing for answers about a prior spill that was uncovered by Civil Beat this week. An estimated 5,000 gallons of water, tainted with firefighting foam, flooded an underground pump house at Red Hill in September 2020, but the Navy allegedly told the health department at the time that no firefighting foam had been released.
In a letter to Comptroller General Gene Dodaro, U.S. Sens. Brian Schatz and Mazie K. Hirono and U.S. Reps. Ed Case and聽 Kai Kahele said Dodaro’s office should investigate whether the Navy adequately cleaned up those spills and whether the military inappropriately withheld information from regulators.
“This community and the people of Hawai鈥榠 deserve answers regarding how the Navy undertook efforts to address these incidents and complete the clean-up and remediation of impacted sites,” the lawmakers wrote.
The firefighting foam the Navy uses is called aqueous film forming foam, or AFFF. It contains a class of chemicals called PFAS that are associated with a litany of , including cancer, low birth weight and impacts to the immune system. They are called “forever chemicals” because they don’t break down in the environment.
The Environmental Protection Agency significantly lowered its safety threshold for two kinds of PFAS earlier this year after discovering the chemicals are The health advisories for two varieties, called PFOS and PFOA, 聽from 70 parts per trillion to 0.02 and 0.004 parts per trillion, respectively.
In their letter, the lawmakers noted that PFAS was in the last two years at levels that exceed today’s safety standards.
“This persistent threat underscores the necessity for adequate oversight and due diligence for the methods employed to handle the containment of such chemicals, safe storage, and eventual remediation of impacted sites,” the congressional delegation wrote.
“Without proper care, the legacy of damage of these spills will impact the health and well-being of people for generations and exact a devastating toll on the ecosystem and environment.”
The lawmakers wrote that the Department of Defense and the Navy should continue their own reviews of its PFAS spills, but a GAO investigation would provide “a necessary third-party assessment of their practices.”
The delegation said it wants to know what deficiencies exist in the Navy’s practices and procedures, whether other Hawaii sites contaminated by PFAS were remediated, and what PFAS-free firefighting foam alternatives exist.
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About the Author
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Christina Jedra is a journalist for Civil Beat focused on investigative and in-depth reporting. You can reach her by email at cjedra@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .