HomeMy WebLinkAboutDEQ-CFW_00073015! R4
Sadosky, Rebecca
From: Godreau, Jessica
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 5:02 PM
To: Sadosky, Rebecca
Subject: FW: PFASs in the Cape Fear River watershed
Attachments: PFECAs_Sun_ESTL2016.pdf, PFECAs_Sun_ESTL2016_SI.pdf
Should have copied you. He called me this afternoon and I sent this in response. Marla was included.
I let him know he needed to talk to Jay if his idea is that there is a new completely unregulated contaminant for which
he wants a standard set.
Oq"SI a
Jessica C Godreau
Chief, Public Water Supply Section
Division of Water Resources
Department of Environmental Quality
919 707 9078 office
919 707 9100 main number
Jessica. God reau(a-)-ncden r. gov
1634 Mail Service Center
Raleigh NC 27699-1634
512 N Salisbury St, Raleigh, NC 27604
Email correspondence to and from this address is subject to the
North Carolina Public Records Law and may be disclosed to third parties.
From: Godreau, Jessica
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 3:11 PM
To: Zimmerman, Jay <jay.zimmerman@ncdenr.gov>; Culpepper, Linda <linda.culpepper@ncdenr.gov>; Fransen, Tom
(tom.fransen@ncdenr.gov) <tom.fransen@ncdenr.gov>
Cc: Poupart, Jeff (jeff.poupart@ncdenr.gov) <jeff.poupart@ncdenr.gov>; Brower, Connie <connie.brower@ncdenr.gov>;
Sink, Marla <Marla.Sink@ncdenr.gov>
Subject: FW: PFASs in the Cape Fear River watershed
up
Heads up that Dr Knappe will be contacting Jay and/or Linda to find out what's been done with his request/information
late last year. He suggests a new health study exists for these contaminants for which we do not have standards which
suggest DEQ should take action.
He wants feedback before he responds to the newspaper about DEQ actions.
I gave him Jay, Tom and Linda's phone numbers.
.9".6tca
Jessica C Godreau
DEQ-CFW 00073015
" I
Chief, Public Water Supply Section
Division of Water Resources
Department of Environmental Quality
919 707 9078 office
919 707 9100 main number
Jessica. God reauOncdenr.00v
1634 Mail Service Center
Raleigh NC 27699-1634
512 N Salisbury St, Raleigh, NC 27604
Email correspondence to and from this address is subject to the
North Carolina Public Records Law and may be disclosed to third parties.
From: Detlef Knappe [mailto:knappe@ncsu.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2017 8:10 AM
To: Hill, Tammy <tammy.l.hill@ncdenr.eov>; Brower, Connie <connie.brower@ncdenr.eov>; Godreau, Jessica
<jessica.godreau@ncdenr.gov>; Gore, Deborah <deborah.gore@ncdenr.gov>; Grzyb, Julie <julie.grzyb@ncdenr.gov>;
Poupart, Jeff <ieff.poupart@ncdenr.gov>; Sadosky, Rebecca <rebecca.sadoskv@ncdenr.gov>
Subject: PFASs in the Cape Fear River watershed
Hello everyone,
I am following up on my email from November 23, 2016 to see whether DEQ staff have discussed the PFAS
contamination in the Cape Fear River downstream of the Chemours plant. A reporter from Wilmington contacted me,
and one of the questions he would like me to answer is what DEQ is doing about the situation. The reporter read the
paper I shared with you in November (also attached here again).
A recent study from Sweden suggests that GenX, one of the compounds we are finding in Wilmington's water, is as toxic
as or more toxic than PFOA, the compound it is replacing.
I will try and reach you by phone this morning as well.
Thank you,
Detlef
Hello everyone,
I am attaching a paper we published this month in ES&T Letters. We studied the occurrence of per- and polyfluoroalkyl
substances (PFASs) in the Cape Fear River watershed. Legacy PFASs, such as PFOA and PFOS dominated the PFAS
signature in the Haw River. In contrast, new fluorinated alternatives such as GenX, a replacement for PFOA, were very
high in Wilmington (and by association also in Brunswick and Pender). None of the newly discovered compounds being
discharged by the Chemours plant south of Fayetteville are removed by the advanced and conventional treatment
processes employed in the Sweeney WTP in Wilmington. Also, many of the compounds are essentially non -adsorbable
on activated carbon. I think it would be useful to discuss the results. A large number of people are exposed to high levels
of PFASs through their drinking water!
Best regards,
DEQ-CFW 00073016
Detlef
On 9/23/16 9:50 AM, Hill, Tammy wrote:
Hello!
I think you all know that Carrie Ruhlman has moved on from DWR. I'll be taking over coordination of the
1,4-dioxane monitoring project. Please feel free to contact me if I can be of assistance in this regard.
Attached are the results from DWR's quarterly surface water monitoring from January -July 2016. We
will sample again in October, then prepare a summary report for October 2014-October 2016 data by
the end of the year.
Warm regards,
Tammy Hill
Water Quality Data Analyst
NC Division of Water Resources — Water Sciences Section
NC Department of Environmental Quality
919 743 8412 office
919 743 8517 fax
Tammv. L. H illy-ncden r.aov
1623 Mail Service Center
Raleigh, NC 27699-1623
f- C.- Nothing Compares
Email correspondence to and from this address is subject to the
North Carolina Public Records Law and may be disclosed to third parties.
Detlef Knappe
Professor
319-E Mann Hall
Department of Civil, Construction, and Environmental Engineering
North Carolina State University
Campus Box 7908
Raleigh, NC 27695-7908
Phone: 919-515-8791
Fax: 919-515-7908
E-mail: knappe@ncsu.edu
Web page: http://knappelab.wordpress.ncsu.edu/
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DEQ-CFW 00073017