Eight months after learning about GenX, residents of Wilmington are still fearful,
uncertain of its consequences.
In June, residents of Wilmington learned their water was contaminated with a newly
discovered chemical compound. Although GenX hasn’t proven to be detrimental for
humans, some blame their contaminated water intake for their health complications.
In December 2016, Bobby Goins was diagnosed with colon cancer.
Although his mother died after battling glioblastoma, a type of brain cancer, he said
doctors couldn’t find a cause for his disease. He lived a healthy life, didn’t smoke
cigarettes, only drank alcohol sporadically, and had regular medical checkups that didn’t
raise any suspicions.
“It's it's been really, really tough year,” he said. “Life was wonderful. You know,
everything seemed to be going good.”
After moving from his hometown of Thomasville to Carolina Beach in 2002, he spent his
weekends fishing on the Cape Fear River. While his friends chose beer, his beverage of
choice to cool down in the blazing sun was water. He estimates he drank three or four
gallons every day.
Now Goins worries that water made him sick.
“You get to the point where you're scared of a glass of water,” said
Goins.”
In June, residents of Wilmington learned there was a newly discovered fluorochemical
in their drinking water. For 40 years, the compound known as GenX, had been released
from a Chemours plant what into the Cape Fear River and bypassed the filters of the
Sweeney Water Treatment Plant.
There isn’t conclusive research to suggest GenX causes disease in humans; in fact,
very little research has been done on the chemical at all, and it is unregulated. Yet
similar chemicals have been linked to cancer and other negative health effects, and the
contamination has left many residents of Wilmington so concerned about their contact
with the compound that they have stopped drinking the water from their faucets.
“You get to the point where you're scared of a glass of water,” said
Goins, who only drinks bottled water now.
Chemours is a spin off of DuPont, one of the largest chemical manufacturing companies
in the world. GenX is a byproduct of Teflon, a material used for nonstick coating in pans
and pots. GenX replaced C8, a compound known to accumulate in the blood and cause
high cholesterol, thyroid disease, as well as testicular and kidney cancers, among other
Illnesses.
In 2013 Detlef Knappe, a scientist from North Carolina State University, discovered
GenX in the Cape Fear River and a year later, in finished water in the Wilmington area.
A study that compared the health effects of GenX and C8 on mice came out in January
2016. The mice showed liver enlargement, and other effects common of perfluorinated
compounds. Knappe said it’s possible that in humans, GenX acts in a similar fashion.
info.cleanair.com
“I think people react much more strongly to the unknown risk than
to a maybe more well-quantified risk,” Knappe said.
The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services released a memo in
June stating the concentration of GenX in drinking water would have to be greater than
70,000 parts per trillion to have the same effects in humans as it did on the mice, which
is more than 100 times greater than the 631 parts per trillion Knappe’s study found.
Last July, Gov. Roy Cooper denied the company’s request to keep on releasing GenX
into the river. Since then, the concentration of the compound has remained below the
DHHS limit of 140 parts per trillion.
Yet residents are still enraged about their constant, inevitable exposure to the
Compound.
“When they put that stuff in the water...with the attitude of ‘We don't really care,’ and
they do it for that long, it shows how much remorse they've got for the people,” Goins
Said.
A woman from Brunswick County filed a lawsuit against Chemours in October after test
results of her tap water showed the presence of GenX. She claims the compound
caused her and her husband to develop the same thyroid disorder. They drank tap
water in the area for 15 years.
“My doctors just kept saying, just drink more water...I didn’t know the water I was drinking all along was contaminated water.” ~Beth Kline-Markesino.
More research on GenX is underway at UNC Wilmington. In November, the state gave
$250,000 to fund four different studies. The Department of Environmental Quality
installed equipment that takes random water samples from the discharge point of the
Fayetteville Works facility down the river. Bridget Munger, a DEQ spokeswoman, said it
provides a better idea of chemical levels in the water.
Aside from weekly testing, Cape Fear Public Utility Authority is trying two different
technologies to filter GenX and other fluorochemicals in the water, according to Lindsey
Hallock, the assistant to the executive director at the CFPUA. The utility is paying for the
costs of the pilot program, but if a new filtering system is implemented in the plant,
residents might have to pay larger fees for the treatment service.
But like Goins, Beth Kline-Markesino, who moved to Wilmington three years ago, is still
relying on bottled water.
She learned about the GenX contamination less than a year after suffering a stillbirth.
Her son, Samuel, didn’t develop kidneys, a bladder or bowels, and his heart was
enlarged. Though her age, 38, made it was a higher-risk pregnancy, she now worries
exposure to GenX could have been the cause.
“My doctors just kept saying, just drink more water, just drink
more water,” she said in tears. “I didn’t know the water I was
drinking all along was contaminated water.”
The experience has turned Kline-Markesino into an activist. She founded a GenX
Facebook group with more than 10,000 members who regularly post thoughts,
questions and new information. She’s working to establish Wilmington’s Stop Gen-X In
Our Water group as a non-profit.
At food establishments, things have changed too.
Samantha Aviles, who works as a barista in a Wilmington coffee shop, said since June
some customers ask for cups of water straight from the Espresso machine, which
comes out at 200 degrees Fahrenheit.