Issue 5, 2025

Tapwater exposures, residential risk, and mitigation in a PFAS-impacted-groundwater community

Abstract

Tapwater (TW) safety and sustainability are priorities in the United States. Per/polyfluoroalkyl substance(s) (PFAS) contamination is a growing public-health concern due to prolific use, widespread TW exposures, and mounting human-health concerns. Historically-rural, actively-urbanizing communities that rely on surficial-aquifer private wells incur elevated risks of unrecognized TW exposures, including PFAS, due to limited private-well monitoring and contaminant-source proliferation in urbanizing landscapes. Here, a broad-analytical-scope TW-assessment was conducted in a hydrologically-vulnerable, Mississippi River alluvial-island community, where PFAS contamination of the shallow-alluvial drinking-water aquifer has been documented, but more comprehensive contaminant characterization to inform decision-making is currently lacking. In 2021, we analyzed 510 organics, 34 inorganics, and 3 microbial groups in 11 residential and community locations to assess (1) TW risks beyond recognized PFAS issues, (2) day-to-day and year-to-year risk variability, and (3) suitability of the underlying sandstone aquifer as an alternative source to mitigate TW-PFAS exposures. Seventy-six organics and 25 inorganics were detected. Potential human-health risks of detected TW exposures were explored based on cumulative benchmark-based toxicity quotients (TQ). Elevated risks (TQ ≥ 1) from organic and inorganic contaminants were observed in all alluvial-aquifer-sourced synoptic samples but not in sandstone-aquifer-sourced samples. Repeated sampling at 3 sites over 52–55 h indicated limited variability in risk over the short-term. Comparable PFAS-specific TQ for spatial-synoptic, short-term (3 days) temporal, and long-term (3 years quarterly) temporal samples indicated that synoptic results provided useful insight into the risks of TW-PFAS exposures at French Island over the long-term. No PFAS detections in sandstone-aquifer-sourced samples over a 3 year period indicated no PFAS-associated risk and supported the sandstone aquifer as an alternative drinking-water source to mitigate community TW-PFAS exposures. This study illustrated the importance of expanded contaminant monitoring of private-well TW, beyond known concerns (in this case, PFAS), to reduce the risks of a range of unrecognized contaminant exposures.

Graphical abstract: Tapwater exposures, residential risk, and mitigation in a PFAS-impacted-groundwater community

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 jan. 2025
Accepted
24 mar. 2025
First published
14 apr. 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2025,27, 1368-1388

Tapwater exposures, residential risk, and mitigation in a PFAS-impacted-groundwater community

P. M. Bradley, K. M. Romanok, K. L. Smalling, L. Donahue, M. P. Gaikowski, R. K. Hines, S. E. Breitmeyer, S. E. Gordon, K. A. Loftin, R. B. McCleskey, S. M. Meppelink and M. L. Schreiner, Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2025, 27, 1368 DOI: 10.1039/D5EM00005J

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