February 15, 2009
EPA wanted tougher C8 limit, memo says
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Federal government scientists originally sought a much tougher standard for the toxic chemical C8 than was included in a nationwide health advisory issued last month, according to an internal U.S. Environmental Protection Agency memo.

More than three years ago, EPA staffers proposed that the agency rewrite a deal with DuPont Co. to mandate a C8 limit of 0.2 parts per billion, according to the memo.

"EPA's intent is to seek consent through negotiations with DuPont," the memo said. "However, the order could be issued unilaterally if agreement cannot be reached."

EPA staffers wrote the undated memo, called a "briefing paper," sometime in March 2006. At the time, the EPA was preparing to negotiate with DuPont. Agency officials wanted to tighten a four-year-old deal that required the company to provide alternative water for Wood County residents whose drinking water contained higher levels of C8.

C8 is a common name for perfluorooctanoate acid, or PFOA. The chemical is a processing agent used for years at DuPont's Washington Works plant south of Parkersburg to make Teflon, other nonstick products, oil-resistant paper packaging and stain-resistant textiles.

A limit of 0.2 parts per billion of C8 would have been twice as stringent as a C8 drinking water health advisory issued by the EPA in late January.

And the proposed limit would have been much stronger than the number the EPA eventually agreed to - 0.5 parts per billion - when it revised the Wood County consent order with DuPont in November 2006.

The EPA would not answer detailed questions about the internal memo, or provide a full explanation of how it went from the more stringent number to the limits it later issued.

Mark Pollins, the EPA's water enforcement division director, would not explain how his agency went from the 0.2 part-per-billion number to the 0.5 figure included in the updated deal with DuPont.

"I can't disclose anything," Pollins said during a Jan. 23 interview, "but in these discussions, there is always a wide range of assumptions that go into it."

Pollins said the EPA memo was "part of the iterative process and discussions that go on within the agency.

"I wouldn't call it a final recommendation or anything like that," Pollins said. "What you saw in that memo was a small piece of that conversation."

Pollins said the EPA memo was exempt from the Freedom of Information act, and agency officials "probably made a mistake in releasing it."

The EPA turned the memo over to lawyers for DuPont plant neighbors in response to a Freedom of Information Act request. Those lawyers provided a copy to the Gazette.

After the Gazette started asking questions about the memo, EPA attorneys demanded that the residents' lawyers return "all copies" of the document.

The EPA had touted its revision of the C8 consent order as a tough measure "to protect drinking water near the DuPont Washington Works."

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Posted By: 4GOD (5:38am 02-15-2009)
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I am sorry. I must have fallen asleep while the EPA fell within the scope of National Security (or one of the few other exceptions to the FOIA).

http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Freedom_of_Information_Act/

This would include proposals, studies, memos or any other produced information.

The employees at the EPA have taken an oath of office. This oath is specific and requires ethical execution. The previous administration may have inhibited the exposure of “top down” policy dictates or directives. This is no longer the case and will not be tolerated within transparency of Government.

Think about it, the blame could be yours alone. This does not feel right, this did not feel right (the review of FOIA requests could be retroactively applied back to 2005) and the responsibility of the job would fall to you. Are you ready to bear this burden (even if it is only within your heart)?

Remember the GAO, OIG or newspapers are only an email away.

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