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Having trouble viewing this email? View it as a Web page. You are subscribed to DHHS Press Releases for Maine Department of Health & Human Services. This information has recently been updated, and is now available. 06/17/2024 08:00 PM EDT
Maine CDC Updates Advisories on Eating Freshwater Fish Due to PFAS Contamination
Adds four new waterbodies, expands three existing advisories AUGUSTA ? The Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention (Maine CDC) today issued updated and additional freshwater fish consumption advisories following ongoing PFAS testing of water bodies across the state. Testing of fish in these locations found levels of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, known as PFAS, above Maine CDC's recommended levels for regular consumption. Based on the results of those tests, the Maine CDC now recommends limiting consumption of all fish or certain fish from the seven waterbodies listed below. Three of the advisories are expansions of those issued last year and four bodies of water are new additions. With these updates and additions, a total of 16 waterbodies in Maine currently have a freshwater fish consumption advisory. All fish consumption advisories are listed on Maine CDC?s website. Elevated levels of the PFAS called perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) were detected in fish tissue samples from McGrath Pond and Salmon Lake in Belgrade and Oakland, Aroostook River in Caribou, Kenduskeag Stream in Kenduskeag and Bangor, Kennebec River in Waterville, Limestone Stream in Fort Fairfield, Annabessacook Lake in Monmouth and Winthrop, and Sandy and Halfmoon Streams in Unity and Thorndike. The new fish consumption advisories, listed below, apply to game fish caught in these waterbodies:
Fishing in these specific waterbodies remains a safe activity, in accordance with the consumption advisories, along with other recreational activities such as swimming, wading, and boating. The Maine CDC recommends that anglers review all existing fish consumption advisories for Maine waters. The Maine Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) collected and tested fish from these waterbodies for PFAS because they are located where historical PFAS contamination has been found in groundwater, surface water, and/or soils. The testing this year included testing of new waterbodies and expanded testing of waterbodies to better inform consumption advisories. The Maine CDC continually consults with Maine DEP and MDIFW to develop plans for additional sampling of fish as part of the State?s ongoing investigation of PFAS. PFAS are a group of man-made chemicals found in a variety of consumer products throughout the world. Based on a report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, exposure to certain PFAS chemicals has been associated with changes in liver and kidney function, changes in cholesterol levels, decreased immune response to vaccines in children, complications during pregnancy, increased risk of kidney cancer and possibly testicular cancer. Three months after taking office in 2019, Governor Janet Mills signed an Executive Order creating a Governor?s Task Force to review the prevalence of PFAS in Maine and to put forward a plan to address it. That Task Force has led to aggressive actions to address PFAS contamination in Maine, including:
In total, the Mills Administration and the Legislature have dedicated more than $100 million over the past several years to address PFAS. For more information about the fish consumption advisories and PFAS, please go to:
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