Drinking Water – Completed Exposure Pathways

Domestic Water Supply Wells
Supply Wells for George AFB and Adelanto

George Air Force Base’s contaminated drinking water provided a Completed Exposure Pathway (CEP)

Supply wells → water → civilians, military personnel and their family members, and surrounding community

Domestic Water Supply WellsThis contaminated drinking water provided the following “Completed Exposure Pathways”

  • Ingestion: Drinking water, cooking
  • Dermal Contact: bathing, showering, swimming pool, occupational exposures
  • Inhalation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs): showering, swamp coolers

The Department of Defense (DOD) and Air Force failed to notify the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) of this potential exposure pathway for the Health Assessment of George AFB.

George Air Force Base had about 14 Installation Restoration Program (IRP) sites (unpermitted dump-sites and unpermitted burn pits) within 500 feet to a mile upstream of the drinking water supply wells for George AFB, Adelanto, private homes, and the former Victor Valley Country Club.

Installation Restoration Program (IRP) sites

Installation Restoration Program (IRP) site specific information for George AFB’s drinking water:

  1. George AFB’s Housing – Completed Exposure Pathway
  2. Southeast Disposal Area – Completed Exposure Pathways
  3. Industrial Waste – Completed Exposure Pathways

The AF acknowledges that these 14 IRP sites contain the following: the outflow from the sewage treatment plant, aviation gas, tetraethyl lead, VOCs, weapons’ residue, heavy metals; industrial, chemical, and/or radioactive waste.

The Air Force by its own admission has no record of all of the dump locations, or what or how much that it disposed at George AFB. See  “Burial of Radioactive Waste in the USAF” – AF – 1972; Nuclear Regulation – “The Military Would Benefit From a Comprehensive Waste Disposal Program” – GAO – 1990; Environmental Cleanup – “Better Data Needed For Radioactively Contaminated Defense Sites” – GAO – 1994; “Lost Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) Records” – EPA – 1996

The Air Force admits that it routinely withheld records and information about radioactive waste from regulators, contractors, and the public.  See “Buried Radioactive Weapons Maintenance Waste” – Air Force Real Property Agency (AFRPA) – 8 May 2003

The Air Force failed to notify the Veterans Affairs or former base personnel of their exposure to potentially life threatening environmental contamination at George AFB.  See Defense Infrastructure – “DOD Can Improve Its Response to Environmental Exposures on Military Installations” – GAO – May 2012


Definitions

Completed exposure pathway:

A pathway of exposure is considered completed when all five elements are present. A completed pathway connects the source of the material to people.

  1. Source
  2. Media
  3. Exposure point
  4. Exposure route
  5. People

Will exposure from a completed pathway affect my health?

Whether or not a person experiences health effects from exposure to materials in the environment depends on a combination of several site-specific factors including.

  • Kind of material released
  • Amount of material available at the exposure point
  • Physical and chemical form of the material
  • Environmental conditions
  • Length of exposure time

Source: EPA

 

I am not a doctor, Veterans Service Officer (VSO), or attorney; therefore, I cannot provide medical or legal advice.

If you, a friend, or a loved one have been injured or have passed away due to exposure to contamination at a DOD Superfund Site, please follow the steps outlined on the "Get Help" page.

The views and opinions expressed on this website belong solely to the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any agency of the U.S. government.

Fair Use Notice   |   Release to one is release to all 

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.