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[Water_news] 4. DWR'S CALIFORNIA WATER NEWS: WATER QUALITY -12/26/07

Department of Water Resources

California Water News

A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment

 

December 26, 2007

 

4. Water Quality

 

SUPERFUND SITE:

Rialto Superfund site designation could downgrade bond credit rate - Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

 

FLUORIDATED WATER:

For some, fluoridated water still hard to swallow - Los Angeles Times

 

 

SUPERFUND SITE:

Rialto Superfund site designation could downgrade bond credit rate

Inland Valley Daily Bulletin – 12/21/07

By Jason Pesick, staff writer

 

RIALTO - On the eve of Rialto's largest bond sale ever, city officials don't seem especially nervous about any financial consequences from stigma that might be attached to designation as a Superfund site.

 

The City Council recently has pushed to get part of the northern section of town declared a Superfund site after years of wrangling over how to go about cleaning up underground water contamination caused by perchlorate.

 

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency probably won't make a Superfund declaration until next fall at the earliest.

 

In the meantime, Rialto officials recently said they wanted to push forward with a proposal to sell $88 million worth of bonds to make over key roads, build fire and police stations, and improve parks, sewers and drainage.

 

The city's redevelopment agency has a stellar credit rating, but rates on the new bonds would have to factor in a Superfund designation if one is made.

 

The agency wants to sell the bonds early next year.

 

"Well, we'll have to disclose that. But if it doesn't affect the development process too significantly, then the rating agencies will be able to look past that," said Robb Steel, the city's economic development director.

 

If the EPA buys the case that the area deserves a Superfund designation, Rialto would get a lot of press attention, said City Councilman Ed Scott.

 

"That's going to be a negative stigma," Scott said.

 

As the process moves forward, though, Scott thinks any stigma associated with development would lessen.

 

Rialto isn't exactly charting new terrain. The San Gabriel Valley is peppered with Superfund sites.

 

Bruce Coleman, Azusa's director of economic and community development, didn't see an economic impact in his own community over a Superfund site.

 

"We've not had any problems issuing bonds," he said.

 

"My experience working in the San Gabriel Valley and elsewhere is that there is generally no impact on properties that overlie or lie on top of groundwater contamination," said Wayne Praskins, a Superfund project manager based in San Francisco.

 

In Rialto's last bond sale in 2005, the city's redevelopment agency got the highest rating for its bonds, meaning Rialto got the best terms to borrow money.

 

Falling land values would translate into less property tax revenue, a stream the city's redevelopment agency would need to pay back the bonds. But city officials are confident land values will hold up.

 

The primary contaminant in Rialto, perchlorate, is flowing in the underground water, seeping roughly six miles from an industrial area in the northern end of the city. Perchlorate is dangerous to humans only if ingested.

 

Being on the Superfund list, known as the National Priorities List, would make Rialto more eligible for cleanup funding if the EPA isn't able to hold any particular entity responsible for the contamination. #

http://www.dailybulletin.com/search/ci_7782291?IADID=Search-www.dailybulletin.com-www.dailybulletin.com

 

 

FLUORIDATED WATER:

For some, fluoridated water still hard to swallow

Los Angeles Times – 12/22/07

By Mike Anton, staff writer

 

A chemist called it "criminally intolerant chemical warfare to enslave the American people." A self-described inventor and "secret investigator" said the government was trying to "kill you slowly." Another man put it bluntly: "Communism is one of the factors behind it."

In the summer of 1966, a year after the Watts riots, Los Angeles City Council members took up what The Times called "one of the most controversial proposals ever." The hearings drew hundreds of agitated citizens.

The supercharged issue? Adding fluoride to tap water to prevent tooth decay. The proposal was defeated, as were subsequent attempts to fluoridate Los Angeles' drinking water in 1968 and 1975. The issue, in Southern California at least, seemed to be dead.

Then last month, the Metropolitan Water District started fluoridating the water it serves 18 million customers across Southern California, giving life to another round of accusations and conspiracy theories. This time, though, a battle once waged by far-right red baiters is being led by independents and activists on the left.

"We are not lab rats and reject any attempt to be treated as such," actor and liberal political activist Martin Sheen and his wife wrote in a letter to The Malibu Times last month after reading about MWD's fluoridation effort in their latest water bill.

The move, four years in the planning, is the largest fluoridation project in U.S. history and thus a watershed in the peculiar story of one of the nation's longest-running controversies.

For more than 60 years, a debate has simmered over whether artificially fluoridated water is one of public health's greatest achievements or an ill-advised attempt by the government to medicate the population by force with a dangerous chemical.

Fluoride is the Kennedy assassination of chemicals, a fountain of myths and misinformation, with people on each side of the issue accusing those on the other of using half-truths and twisted facts to push their agenda.

Virtually all of the science and medical establishment -- including the American Dental Assn., the American Medical Assn., the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention -- have endorsed fluoride in water. Supporters say numerous studies over the decades show that the chemical, in low concentrations -- about one part per million or the equivalent of three drops in 42 gallons of water -- reduces tooth decay by 20% to 60% with minimal risk.

"The science is crystal clear," said Jon Roth, executive director of the California Dental Assn. Foundation. "The unfortunate thing is there are still folks out there who do a good job of cherry-picking the scientific information. . . . I don't know where the motivation comes from. I just don't get it."

Though far fewer in number, fluoride's opponents are strident and proud to be committed to an uphill fight. In the 1960s, foes said fluoride produced Down syndrome in children. Today, opponents emphasize fluoride's purported links to bone cancer, thyroid dysfunction and other diseases. They say toxins such as arsenic and lead contaminate the hydrofluosilicic acid used to fluoridate water. They say the benefits are vastly overblown and point to Europe, which has low rates of tooth decay even though most countries there don't add fluoride to their water.

But today's fluoride opponents are not nearly so vocal as those of a generation ago; there was little opposition in 2003 when the MWD began preparing to fluoridate its water. The city of Los Angeles finally did it in the mid-1990s without public outcry.

In 1945, Grand Rapids, Mich., became the first U.S. city to fluoridate as part of a long-term federal study. In the 1950s and 60s, groups such as the John Birch Society warned that having government tamper with public water was the first step toward totalitarianism.

"It's incredibly obvious, isn't it?" the crazed Gen. Jack D. Ripper asked in the movie "Dr. Strangelove," which lampooned Cold War fluoride opponents. "A foreign substance is introduced into our precious bodily fluids without the knowledge of the individual, and certainly without any choice. That's the way your hard-core commie works."

Ed Edelman, who pushed fluoridation as a young Los Angeles city councilman, recalls being shocked by the vitriol.

"People thought we were trying to put poison in the water," said Edelman, 77. "They came out of the woodwork. They were strange folks. . . . I hate to use the word 'crazies.' Nevertheless, I guess I can use it now."

Today, fluoride isn't among the topics on the John Birch Society's website.

When William F. Jasper first went to work for the group in the mid-1970s, the fluoride fight had taken a back seat to more pressing issues.

"We did have quite large files on fluoridation," said Jasper, a senior editor for the group's magazine. "I'm sure we still do somewhere."

Jasper notes that the John Birch Society still opposes fluoridation as an abuse of government power. But he wasn't aware that his hometown of Sacramento began adding fluoride to its water two years ago.

"That was off my radar screen," Jasper said.

Fluoride opponents today argue that government and industry have conspired to shove fluorosilicic acid -- a byproduct of making phosphate fertilizers -- down the public's throat as a way to dispose of the stuff.

"It's the largest single insult to the citizens of this nation in its history," said David Kennedy, a retired San Diego dentist and among the most outspoken opponents who keep the fight alive through such groups as the Web-based Fluoride Action Network.

Kennedy, 62, who also has a degree in biochemistry and physiology, is past president of the International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology, which has promoted research on the dangers of mercury in fillings.

Finding Kennedy is easy: His home is the only one in his neighborhood with a large sign out front that reads, "Warning. Fluoride is Not Safe for a Baby!"

Kennedy, an articulate and intelligent defender of his views, is used to being dismissed as a wacko. He couldn't care less.

"If you dare say you are against fluorosilicic acid in our water, you get labeled as a kook. That's their strategy: You denigrate the source by saying, 'This is just junk science,' " he said.

Kennedy has been at odds with his profession for years. He hasn't used toothpaste since 1984, insisting saliva contains the nutrients needed for healthy teeth. "There is no valid scientific evidence to support the benefits of fluoride. . . . The Centers for Disease Control? They're lying."

Because fluoride easily bonds with other chemicals it has been widely used in industry, including in the manufacture of steel, glass and ceramics. More sinister, in the eyes of its critics, have been its uses in such things as rat poison and atomic bomb production.

And fluoride opponents can point to one indisputable fact: The chemical is indeed dangerous, even in small amounts. It's extremely corrosive -- an accidental spill of fluorosilicic acid on a Florida interstate a few years ago sent more than 50 people to hospitals. Drinking an ounce would probably kill a person.

The amount considered optimal for teeth is minuscule by comparison. The EPA allows dozens of dangerous chemicals to be added in minute amounts to public water for a variety of reasons. Chlorine and ozone purify. Hydrochloric acid makes water less alkaline; sodium hydroxide makes it less acidic. Aluminum sulfate makes it clearer. Sodium chloride softens hard water.

What sets fluoride apart is that it is the only chemical specifically added to water as a health remedy.

"The people who are against this -- they are so exercised over it," said Michael Easley, a Florida state health official who has been one of the nation's leading proponents of fluoridation for three decades. "Nobody drags anyone to a water faucet and makes them drink. Dig a well. Move out of the country."

When a panel of scientists last year reported that high fluoride levels could damage the tooth enamel of children and weaken adult bones, opponents of fluoridation cited the finding as more proof of the chemical's danger.

But the National Academies' National Research Council focused on the relatively small number of Americans who drink water with naturally occurring fluoride levels that are about four times the recommended concentration. The report didn't examine the risks or benefits of lower-level artificially fluoridated water.

Nevertheless, the council's report prompted the American Dental Assn. to recommend that reconstituted baby formula be made with fluoride-free water to reduce the risk of enamel fluorosis, which could permanently stain developing teeth. The group continues to support fluoridation of drinking water.

That kind of scientific nuance, filtered through city council debates and voter initiatives -- and now the Internet -- has kept fluoride out of some water systems. Still, about 170 million Americans, about two-thirds of the population, drink from public systems with the recommended amount of fluoride.

>From the start, "every city that wanted to add fluoride conducted public hearings that brought out all sorts of theories," Easley said. "If they held immunizations to the same standard -- bringing it before city councils or going to the ballot box with it -- I doubt the states would have programs requiring them."

California has been slow to adopt fluoride. Prior to 1995, California ranked 48th out of the 50 states in the percentage of people who drank fluoridated water. That year, Easley helped write legislation passed by the Assembly which mandates that water providers fluoridate when money becomes available to retrofit their systems. With the MWD's move and San Diego poised to add fluoride, California will soon be on par with the rest of the U.S.

In August, as the MWD prepared to begin adding fluoride, Kennedy spoke before the agency's board. He insisted they had an obligation to warn customers that their children were about to be poisoned.

He spoke about three minutes. There were no questions for him. In the weeks that followed, there was little public outcry.

Being a fluoride warrior can be a lonely business.

"I've spent more of my own money and time on this than I need to," Kennedy said. "We have as a nation become idiots staring at boob tubes. . . . Did they forget how to read? Or are their brains damaged from exposure to fluoride?" #

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-fluoride22dec22,0,2201981,full.story

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