Low levels of forever chemicals detected in West Oahu water
Officials said the water is safe but KHON2 heard from lawmakers who want more transparency.
10 tips foreign tourists need to know before visiting Hawaiʻi amid mass travel warnings
The Department of Health on Monday, March 31 that two new forever chemicals were detected in water samples from wells that serve residents from Ewa to Makaha. The Honolulu Board of Water Supply had sent out a on Tuesday, March 25.
'These are PFAS chemicals that are currently have no standards. There's no EPA regulation, and Department of Health has some environmental action levels that we use to kind of understand whether or not it's a concern. The levels in relation to those numbers are so small that it doesn't have a concern,' said Honolulu Board of Water Supply deputy manager Erwin Kawata.
Monthly testing found one PFAS chemical as far back as November, 2024 and it was still detectable through the beginning of February, 2025. Kawata said they have switched to weekly well testing.'November? This is now March, April and we are only being told now! I would have thought that any issue with PFAS, was should be something that people should be alert of, whether small or not,' said Nanakuli/Maili/Honokai Hale Rep. Darius Kila.
Forever chemicals detected in Oahu Navy drinking water
'It's a small amount to where there should be no concern,' said House Health Committee member Rep. Diamond Garcia. 'But any time residents hear there's forever chemicals in our water system, it gives us a pause, 'Do I want to cook our rice with it, shower in it, brush our teeth with it?''
PFAS were first detected on Oahu in 2020 after EPA testing standards were made more strict, but they have been in use since the 1940's.
'What's different is that we are seeing something that we haven't seen in 2020,' Kawata said. 'Are these numbers more stable or are they changing or are they going down in any way, it's something that we want to keep an eye on and keep on surveillance.'
One of the chemicals out west — Perfluorooctanoic Acid — has been identified as a carcinogen and is linked to birth defects.
'It's kind of scary because I think we're just accepting the fact that this is the new reality we're living with, but it's not 'harmful or dangerous,'' Rep. Kila said, 'because in its most earliest iterations, all of our water was never tainted like this. Ever.'
Check out more news from around Hawaii
for more information about PFAS.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
15 hours ago
- Yahoo
'People are not happy': Presque Isle deals with swimming restrictions at Beaches 6 & 8
Presque Isle State Park lifeguards have been posted this week at the entrances of Beaches 6 and 8, more than 100 yards from the Lake Erie shoreline. Their job has been to politely inform visitors that swimming has been restricted at the popular beaches due to consistently high levels of E. coli bacteria. No one has been allowed to swim at Beaches 6 and 8 since July 8. "People are not happy and understandably so," said Matt Greene, the park's operations manager. "These are two of our most popular beaches and people have been going to them for a long time." High E. coli levels are a concern because they indicate a significant amount of sewage or animal waste in the water that can give swimmers gastrointestinal illness or skin infections. Park officials have been working with the Erie County Department of Health to figure out why levels are so high, and what can be done to lower them and once again allow people to swim at Beaches 6 and 8. "Right now, we don't have an explanation," Greene said. "We haven't seen any unusual storms that cause run off from nearby streams, or significant bird activity at those beaches." Though water samples taken at both beaches this week have not exceeded the daily limit of 999 E. coli particles per 100 milliliters of lake water, they have been high enough at both beaches to exceed the average, or geometric mean, of 126 particles over the previous 30 days of testing. Beach 6's geometric mean was 146 on July 11, while Beach 8's was 127.8, Greene said. "One good (testing) day could bring them down and allow us to lift the restrictions," Greene said. The issue most days has been that one of the three daily samples taken at each beach has been high, which increases the beach's average. After a storm passes, the amount of E. coli in all three samples is usually elevated. Some days a sample taken from the edge of a beach's swimming section is high, while other times it's a sample taken from the middle, Greene said. Park officials are "crunching the numbers" to determine a reason for the high levels, Greene said. They are looking at several possible causes, including infrastructure problems and testing anomalies. More: Swimming restricted for second straight day at two Presque Isle State Park beaches Though swimming is currently not allowed at the park's two most popular beaches, park officials do have alternatives. They have opened Beaches 1, 3, 7 and 10 for swimming in recent days, along with Beach 11, which is usually open for swimming. They might even open Beach 9 on weekends, Greene said. "The bathrooms at those beaches are already open, so we just make sure the lifeguard operations are ready at those beaches," Greene said. "Beaches 6 and 8 are centrally located, though, and they are where we have put in so much infrastructure. We don't like having restrictions at all, but certainly not at those two beaches." Contact David Bruce at dbruce@ Follow him on X @ETNBruce. This article originally appeared on Erie Times-News: No swimming at Presque Isle beaches still due to E. coli

E&E News
16 hours ago
- E&E News
EU ministers get their blood tested for forever chemicals
European environment ministers underwent blood testing for 'forever chemicals' Thursday in a publicity exercise to highlight the alarming reach of the toxic substances. 'I'm hoping to bring awareness to this problem,' Danish Minister for the Environment Magnus Heunicke told POLITICO. 'This is causing really serious problems to our health and to our environment. We need to actually ban PFAS in our everyday products throughout the EU.' Denmark orchestrated the group test during a meeting of EU environment ministers in the northern Danish city of Aalborg. The country currently holds the rotating presidency of the Council of the EU. Advertisement PFAS substances — commonly known as forever chemicals — don't break down naturally and have been shown to accumulate in the environment and cause a host of health conditions, including cancer, liver damage and decreased fertility. Most people in the world have some level of PFAS in their blood.


The Hill
17 hours ago
- The Hill
DuPont agrees to $27M settlement in Hoosick Falls water contamination lawsuit
HOOSICK FALLS, N.Y. (NEWS10) — The village of Hoosick Falls is nearing a final victory against the companies that were accused of contaminating its water supply: DuPont has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit for $27 million. In 2016, a chemical called PFOA, which had been used in the making of Teflon at a fabric-coating plant in Hoosick Falls, was discovered in the village's water supply. PFOA is one of thousands of substances that are known as 'forever chemicals' because they persist in the environment for hundreds or even thousands of years instead of breaking down. Exposure to these chemicals, also called PFAS, has been linked to cancer and other health issues. PFOA in particular has been linked to kidney and testicular cancer, as well as conditions including ulcerative colitis and thyroid disease. The lawsuit was filed against four companies: 3M, Saint-Gobain, Honeywell and DuPont. 3M, Saint-Gobain and Honeywell settled in 2021 for $65 million. The settlement with DuPont is still awaiting final approval, but if it goes through, it will bring the total amount recovered in the lawsuit to $92 million. PFAS are commonly used in a wide range of nonstick, waterproof and stain resistant items including pans, dental floss, makeup, furniture and clothing. They have also become pervasive in U.S. waterways, tap water and human beings — and are estimated to be in the bloodstream of at least 97 percent of Americans. While virtually every American has been exposed to these chemicals, communities such as Hoosick Falls near factories or other areas where they are made or used in large quantities have seen outsized impacts from exposure. —Rachel Frazin contributed.