The Unhealthy
Consequences of Chloraminated Water
By Christopher Bollyn In order to meet standards set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), municipal water districts across the United States are changing
they way they disinfect public water supplies. In many cases this involves
adding ammonia to chlorinated water to produce chloramines, or
chloraminated water.
While chloramination has been recommended by the EPA since the 1990s as a
way to lower the level of carcinogenic disinfection byproducts (DBPs)
created by chlorination, it has led to unintended consequences, in some
cases making the water extremely toxic.
LEAD POISONING
In the nation's capital, for example, the change to chloraminated
water in 2000 caused a huge spike in lead levels in the water. The
chloramines reacted with antiquated pipes causing toxic levels of lead in
some Washingtonians' drinking water.
When Washington's Water and Sewer Authority (WASA) switched from using
free chlorine to chloramines to disinfect the water, serious problems with
lead leaching started to occur. Lead levels were found in Washington�s
water 3,200 times the EPA's action level and 4,800 times the UN's
acceptable level for the toxic heavy metal.
The Washington Post reported in October 2004 that the D.C. Water and Sewer
Authority knew in 2001 that its water contained unsafe lead levels, but
withheld six high test results and said the water was fine.
While the Post article did not mention chloramines, it did say that other
cities have similar problems dealing with unacceptably high levels of lead
in their water:
Cities across the country are manipulating the results of tests used to
detect lead in water, violating federal law and putting millions of
Americans at risk, the Post reported. Some cities, including Philadelphia
and Boston, have thrown out tests that show high readings or have avoided
testing homes most likely to have lead.
In New York City, the Post wrote, the nation's largest water provider has
for the past three years assured its 9.3 million customers that its water
was safe because the lead content fell below federal limits. But the city
has withheld from regulators hundreds of test results that would have
raised lead levels above the safety standard in two of those years.
The American Water Works Association (AWWA), an international nonprofit
scientific society dedicated to the improvement of drinking water quality,
reported that samples of Washington water collected after flushing were as
high as 48,000 parts per billion (ppb). Some of the highest lead
concentrations came from taps after one minute of flushing.
The EPA�s �action level for lead in drinking water is 15 ppb, while the
UN's World Health Organization recommends that lead not exceed 10 ppb.
According to the EPA, If the lead concentration of the drinking water at
the tap is above the action level, the water supplier may be required to
install corrosion-control equipment, monitor the water source, and replace
lead service lines, as well as undertake a public education program.
After switching to chloraminated water, children in Washington ingested
more than 60 times the EPA's maximum level of lead with one glass of
water.
[Lead] contaminated water is a greater risk to youth, the EPA notes. A
2-year-old's estimated daily intake of lead from all sources should not
exceed 190 ppb per day, according to EPA guidelines.
In March 2004, after a number of 2-year-olds in Washington were found to
have high levels of lead in their blood, D.C. City Administrator Robert
Bobb said that 23,000 homes with lead service lines would receive filters
within 30 days.
Lead in the drinking water was a problem that plagued ancient Rome.
Vitruvius, Roman architect and engineer, warned of lead in his 1st Century
B.C. opus De Architectura: Water from clay pipes is much more wholesome
than that which is conducted through lead pipes, because lead is found to
be harmful . . . hurtful to the human system. Hence, water ought by no
means to be conducted in lead pipes, if we want to have it wholesome,
Vitruvius wrote.
TOXIC BYPRODUCTS
The chlorination of water also creates a host of known and unknown
organic byproducts, which experts say are �the chemicals of greatest
concern� due to their toxicity and carcinogenic potential. To reduce the
level of harmful DBPs and the odor in the water, the EPA began promoting
chloramination of water in 1994.
While the chloramines reduce the level of known DBPs, they create a host
of unknown DBPs, some of which are extremely toxic.
In Corpus Christi, Texas, for example, where the water is treated only
with chloramines, the reaction with the bromide and iodide laden source
water creates some of the �most toxic and genotoxic DBPs ever found.
Although chlorine has been used to disinfect water for over 100 years,
less than 50 percent of the DBPs in chlorinated drinking water are known.
With chloramines, only 17 percent of the DBPs have been identified.
The unintended generation of DBPs poses a chronic health risk,� Dr.
Michael J. Plewa, a genetic toxicology expert at the University of
Illinois, wrote. Plewa authored a 2004 EPA-funded study of the effects of
chloramines in the water of Corpus Christi.
In the chloramine-treated water of Corpus Christi, Plewa's study
discovered a number of new and extremely toxic DBPs: iodoacids.
The iodoacetic acid is the most toxic and genotoxic DBP in mammalian cells
reported in the literature,� Plewa wrote. Of the known DBPs, the
iodoacetic acid found in the drinking water of Corpus Christi was �the
most toxic and DNA-damaging.�
Plewa told AFP that Houston�s source water is probably very similar to the
water of Corpus Christi. Individuals who consume chlorinated drinking
water have an elevated risk of cancer of the bladder, stomach, pancreas,
kidney and rectum as well as Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Plewa
wrote. DBPs also have been linked to reproductive and developmental
effects, including the induction of spontaneous abortions.
A VASTLY BIG EXPERIMENT
I don't want to sound glib, Plewa said in an interview with
American Free Press, but we are participating in a vastly big
experiment.
The EPA is looking for an exit strategy from research on chloraminated
water, Plewa said, while scientists are calling for more research about
the toxicity of the halogenated organics, the unintended DBDs, in our
drinking water.
CALIFORNIA'S CHLORAMINE WARS
In San Francisco, the addition of chloramines in February 2004 to the
peninsula's drinking water has provoked chloramine wars, pitting
outraged citizens against the municipal water boards, The San Francisco
Examiner noted last summer.
Chloraminated water kills fish and reptiles. When it was added to the San
Francisco water supply it nearly had the same effect on some humans.
I almost died, Denise Kula Johnson of Menlo Park said the day after
chloramines were added to her water supply. I was in the shower and
suddenly I could not breathe. I passed out on the floor. I was terrified.
Leading the crusade against chloramines in drinking water is Winn Parker,
a medical technologist from Milbrae, California.
This is a national issue, Parker told AFP. The government is hiding the
fact that the drinking water is not usable.
Parker is calling for government funding of alternative disinfection
methods, such as ultra-violet and reverse osmosis, which would make
harmful chemical disinfection methods obsolete.
The most at-risk groups from chloraminated water are, according to Parker:
the fetus in the first trimester, children to age three, people over age
60 and those with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Women in the 35-45
age group are at risk of recurring rashes on the inner thighs and chest,
he added.
Twenty years ago the use of chloraminated water in Los Angeles was found
to be potentially lethal to kidney patients during dialysis.
The increased nitrogen in the drinking water, which filters don't remove,
can severely affect people taking medications for hypertension, breast
cancer and penile dysfunction, Parker said. The side effects are close to
death.
The government is being its own bio-terrorists, Parker told AFP. Every
day Parker considers the health risks faced by the 180 million Americans
who consume chloraminated water.
We need to amend the Constitution, Parker said, to give the people in
each state the right to vote on what goes into their water.
~
Christopher Bollyn is a correspondent with American Free Press newspaper
and has developed a following among truth seeks around the globe. He was
recently voted one of the top 10 writers on the Internet by an informal
poll of patriots.
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