The Environmental Working                 Groupreleased                   a report Monday indicating that millions of                 Americans are regularly drinking hexavalent chromium,                 made famous in the film "Erin Brockovich" as a                 carcinogen, through their tap water.
               The group -- whose study was first reported in a                 story Sunday by                   the Washington Post's Lyndsey Layton -- tested                 water from 35 U.S. cities and found that samples from 31                 cities contained hexavalent chromium. The highest                 concentrations were found in Norman, Okla.; Honolulu;                 and Riverside, Calif. The substance had been a widely                 used industrial chemical for decades and has evidently                 leached into the groundwater in many areas.
               [Related: Drilling                   ban follows concern over flammable water]
               The EWG report states:
               "Despite mounting evidence                 of the contaminant's toxic effects, the U.S.                 Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has not set a                 legal limit for chromium-6 in tap water and does not                 require water utilities to                 test for it. Hexavalent chromium is commonly discharged                 from steel and pulp mills as well as metal-plating and                 leather-tanning facilities. It can also pollute water                 through erosion of natural deposits.
               "The authoritative National                 Toxicology Program (NTP) of the U.S. Department of                 Health and Human Services has said that chromium-6 indrinking water shows                 'clear evidence of carcinogenic activity' in laboratory                 animals, increasing the risk of gastrointestinal tumors.                 Just last October, a draft review by the EPA similarly                 found that ingesting the chemical in tap water is                 'likely to be carcinogenic to humans.' Other health                 risks associated with exposure include liver and kidney                 damage, anemia and ulcers."
               [Related: Leaking                   ice raises tricky climate issue]
               Drinking-water                 supplies all                   over the country are increasingly tainted bychemicals                   used in natural gas drilling. And Erin Brockovich,                 for her part, told the EWG that she's rather astonished                 to find that hexavalent chromium is still a prospective                 health threat in so many communities.
               [List: America's                   most polluted cities]
               "It is sometimes difficult to understand why I                 still have to warn the public about the presence of                 hexavalent chromium in drinking water 23 years after my                 colleagues and I first sounded the alarm," Brockovich                 told the EWG. "This report underscores, in fairly stark                 terms, the health risks that millions of Americans still                 face because of water contamination."
               The list                   of cities found to have hexavalent chromium in                 the municipal watersupplies are                 as follows:
               ⢠Honolulu, HI
                 ⢠Bend, OR
                 ⢠Sacramento, CA
                 ⢠San Jose, CA
                 ⢠Los Angeles, CA
                 ⢠Riverside, CA
                 ⢠Las Vegas, NV
                 ⢠Salt Lake City, UT
                 ⢠Scottsdale, AZ
                 ⢠Phoenix, AZ
                 ⢠Albuquerque, NM
                 ⢠Norman, OK
                 ⢠Omaha, NE
                 ⢠Madison, WI
                 ⢠Milwaukee, WI
                 ⢠Chicago, IL
                 ⢠Ann Arbor, MI
                 ⢠Louisville, KY
                 ⢠Cincinnati, OH
                 ⢠Buffalo, NY
                 ⢠Syracuse, NY
                 ⢠Pittsburgh, PA
                 ⢠Villanova, PA
                 ⢠Boston, MA
                 ⢠New Haven, CT
                 ⢠New York, NY
                 ⢠Bethesda, MD
                 ⢠Washington, DC
                 ⢠Atlanta, GA
                 ⢠Tallahassee, FL
                 ⢠Miami, FL
               (Photo: AP/Bob Child)
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