From Peter Burress <[email protected]>
Subject re: Is your community's water toxic?
Date February 22, 2022 5:43 PM
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John–

The Natural Resources Board votes TOMORROW to pass PFAS standards – an important step toward protecting our drinking water from these toxic forever chemicals.

Thanks to conservation voters like you, we’ve been raising the alarms about the need for decision makers in the NRB – and in the state capitol – to act now on PFAS contamination, but we need your continued support to keep public  pressure on in the face of powerful polluting special interests like Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce.

Will you chip in an urgent gift today that helps us keep fighting to protect Wisconsin’s drinking water from dangerous PFAS? [[link removed]]

Thanks for all you do for clean water!

Peter



[[link removed]]

Hi John,

As you may know, cities and towns across the state have been finding PFAS contamination [[link removed]], also known as “forever chemicals,” in their drinking water, and there may be more communities that haven’t discovered contamination yet.

Wisconsin communities like Wausau, Marinette, Peshtigo, Rhinelander, Eau Claire, Campbell, La Crosse, and Madison have all had confirmed cases of PFAS toxicity. Corporate polluters and their enablers like Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce (WMC) have been allowing these chemicals to leach into our water for years with no consequences.

No state or federal water regulations
The thing is, there are currently no state or federal standards for testing and cleaning up existing water pollution, and groups like WMC want to keep it that way. We must act quickly to set standards at the state level to protect the health of our neighbors, and particularly our children.

On Feb. 23, the Wisconsin Natural Resources Board will vote to pass rules on groundwater, surface water, and drinking water. Thanks to our members, we’ve kept up public pressure through a petition and public testimonies to make sure the board understands what’s at stake.

Continuing the fight
These rules are a necessary first step to establishing standards at the state level, but ultimately, we need to pass the CLEAR Act [[link removed]]. Know that we will continue to fight to ensure everyone in our state has access to clean water and hold polluters and elected officials accountable.

And just remember, our voices – our members, partners, and allies – matter. By showing up to testify, signing petitions, and being active in this movement, we have proven over and over again that our voices are louder than the large polluting organizations like WMC. We can create a future where everyone has access to clean water.

Sincerely,

Peter Burress
Government Affairs Manager
Wisconsin Conservation Voters

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