Hexavalent Chromium: Tap Water Industry Knew About the 'Brockovich Chemical' For Years, Reports EWG
The tap water industry has known since 2004 about worrisome levels of  a suspected carcinogen in America's drinking water, claims Environmental Working Group (EWG).  
EWG reported a few months ago that laboratory tests found high levels of suspected carcinogen chromium-6Lisa Jackson responded quickly to the report, launching a risk assessment of the chemical found in drinking water.   in the drinking water of 31 U.S. cities. Norman, Oklahoma; Honolulu,  Hawaii; Riverside, California; and Madison, Wisconsin reported the  highest levels of contamination. EPA Administrator 
The chemical, also known as “hexavalent chromium,” became well known  after renowned legal assistant Erin Brockovich won a settlement against  Pacific Gas & Electric Co. The company allegedly dumped the chemical  into the local water of Hinkley, CA. After the EWG report on the cities with high levels of chromium-6, Brockovich told The New York Times, "It may be more widespread than I had even thought and I had thought it was pretty widespread."
While EWG’s report came out just a few months ago, it turns out that  the tap water industry may have found clear evidence of chromium-6  pollution in untreated water back in 2004 (although pollution levels in  untreated and treated water cannot be directly compared). EWG claims  that the industry’s survey, conducted by the Awwa Research Foundation,  studied data on 189 utilities in 41 states, and concluded that  chromium-6 was common in American groundwater. 
The 2004 industry study was obtained by EWG. Jane Houlihan, EWG  senior vice president for research, states, “The tap water industry’s  2004 study is unmistakable proof that it has known about extensive  chromium-6 contamination for at least seven years.” Yet, EWG reports  that tap water industry representatives did not mention their study  during the February 2nd Senate environment committee hearing on  chromium-6 pollution. According to EWG, it does not appear that the  customers of the utilities with tainted water were notified of the  chemical’s presence.
  Erin Brokovich is sadly unsurprised by the utilities’ silence. She  tells EWG, “Instead of treating their customers like adults and sharing  the test results with them, they shelved the findings, letting folks  continue to drink water for years that could contain chromium-6.”
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