Drinking Water

Backing Its Mining Industry, West Virginia Sues U.S. to Block Water Quality Rules

West Virginia is suing the Obama administration to try to block new water quality rules intended to protect streams from being polluted  by mountaintop coal mining. West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin, a Democrat, portrayed the federal court case against the Environmental Protection Agency as part of a fight against the Obama administration’s “attempts to destroy our coal ... Read more »

Agreements to Advance Uranium Cleanups on Native American Lands

Federal officials have announced settlements aimed at reducing uranium contamination from abandoned mines and waste sites on Navajo and Hopi lands. Under terms of one agreement, Rio Algom Mining LLC of Canada will pave part of a road near the Quivira Mine near Gallup, N.M., to tamp down radioactive dust, which can cause lung cancer when inhaled. The company ... Read more »

Drilling Firms Told to Fork Over Fracking Formulas

The Environmental Protection Agency has asked nine drilling companies to provide detailed information about the chemicals they use in a controversial process for extracting natural gas. The technique, known as hydraulic fracturing or “fracking”, involves breaking up underground rock formations to release gas, and is being investigated by the EPA following concerns raised by Congress and the public about its potential effects on public health and drinking ... Read more »

EPA Warns of Tainted Drinking Water in Wyoming Town

Residents of a small Wyoming town near extensive natural gas drilling have been warned by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency not to drink their local water following new water testing in the area. The investigative news organization ProPublica reports that the EPA cautioned residents of Pavillion after a new round of testing and analysis of ... Read more »

After a $220,000 Study, Coal Slurry Risks Remain a Puzzler

Hardly anyone would dispute that when mining companies clean coal, it leads to a lot of dirty water. But does that waste eventually leach through the ground to taint drinking water supplies? Three years ago, legislators in the mining state of West Virginia commissioned a $220,000 study to explore that question. Researchers sought to figure ... Read more »

Michigan Oil Spill May Top 1 Million Gallons, EPA Says

As clean-up efforts continue in the Gulf, officials are scrambling to stop a Michigan oil spill that is believed to be one of the largest ever in the Midwest. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that more than one million gallons of oil may have spilled into the Kalamazoo River, and Governor Jennifer M. Granholm ... Read more »

More California Drinking Water Contaminated by Nitrates

Lax regulation has led to unhealthy levels of nitrates in the drinking water of more than 2 million Californians, and the problem is getting worse, California Watch reports. Agricultural fertilizers are a leading cause of nitrate contamination. Infants who drink water with high levels of nitrites can develop “blue baby syndrome,” which cuts off their oxygen ... Read more »

Gulf Oil Spill is Potential Threat to Drinking Water, Air, Seafood

Officials have begun to step up monitoring of health threats from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Public health agencies are monitoring drinking water, seafood and air quality for contamination. Last week, a “foul stench” drifting over parts of southwestern Louisiana was likely attributable to the spill. Residents living as far as 130 miles away ... Read more »

Catskills to Stay a Frack-Free Zone

Environmental officials in New York have blocked natural gas drilling in the two Catskills watersheds that provide drinking water to more than 9 million people in New York City and nearby counties. The state has not banned gas drilling in the region, but chose to leave the watersheds out of its regulatory plan for drilling ... Read more »

Well Leaking Natural Gas Forces Hundreds from their Homes

A leaking natural gas well contaminated drinking water in rural western Louisiana on Monday, forcing hundreds of people from their homes. Employees from Dallas-based EXCO Resources waited to call authorities for 12 hours after they first realized they couldn’t contain bubbling gas and extreme pressure about 1,200 feet underground in Caddo Parish, ProPublica reports. A spokesperson ... Read more »