An Air Force official denied earlier this month that the service knew about the potential hazards of firefighting foam more than a decade before curtailing its use.
The denial follows this news organization’s November investigation of documents that showed numerous military employees considering the potential hazards of the foam as far back as 1995. The findings of that investigation, published Nov. 19, are part of ongoing reporting on the military’s widespread use of firefighting foams, which has contaminated drinking water across the country with toxic perfluorinated compounds, including the water for approximately 70,000 Bucks and Montgomery County residents.
In Pease, New Hampshire, another community affected by firefighting foam contamination, residents recently invited Air Force Lt. Col. Joseph Costantino to a joint government-community meeting there to discuss this news organization’s Nov. 19 article.
Andrea Amico, co-founder of a Testing for Pease community group formed around the contamination there, pressed Costantino. “How far back did the Air Force know that (firefighting foam) was toxic, that it was building up in the environment and getting into water supplies?” Amico asked.
“The answer is we didn’t know,” Costantino replied. “We don’t have a core competency in chemical toxicity research and testing ... Up until a few years ago, we weren’t taking any action on it because we just didn’t have the information.”
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