'Forever chemicals' from a military installation at Mitchell Airport are a risk to nearby drinking wells, Lake Michigan, a report says

Laura Schulte
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MADISON - Despite testing that found "forever chemicals" at Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport two years ago, the Department of Defense has yet to move forward with a plan to address the contamination, putting nearby residents with private drinking wells at risk. 

The Department of Defense was notified by the state Department of Natural Resources that it was the responsible party for contamination from PFAS — per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances — in ground and surface water near the airport in 2019, but no action has yet been taken, according to a new report by the Environmental Working Group. 

The environmental advocacy group looked at publicly available data related to PFAS testing at DOD sites across the Great Lakes region and found that several sites, including Mitchell Airport, could be contaminating not only groundwater but the lakes that give the area its name. 

Firefighting foam has been used at the airport by both the Air National Guard 128th Air Refueling Wing, which remains on site, and the 440th Airlift Wing of the Air Force Reserve, which left Milwaukee in 2007. The compound found during testing at the airport was PFHxS, a member of the PFAS family used in firefighting foam.

MORE: State agencies hope to keep water quality issues at forefront of discussions with series of presentations

MORE:Evers, Kaul announce that California-based law firm will take on litigation against 'forever chemical' manufacturers

MORE: Reps. Kind, Gallagher introduce a bipartisan bill to help families test their private wells for 'forever chemicals'

Some of the highest levels of the chemicals were found in private drinking wells along the borders of the Milwaukee airport, said Jared Hayes, a policy analyst with the Environmental Working Group. And because no aggressive action has been taken since the discovery of the compounds, some residents in the area may not even know they're at risk. 

"People with private wells on the Great Lakes near these bases may not even know they're being exposed to these chemicals," he said. 

Contaminated water is also flowing into Lake Michigan from the airport, where it is likely to accumulate in the fish population. 

"(PFAS) have been getting into the Great Lakes, it has been getting into the fish population," Hayes said. "And that has an impact on recreation and commercial industries." 

Lake Michigan also serves as a drinking water source for both Milwaukee and Chicago, meaning millions of people rely on the lake. Three other DOD sites along Lake Michigan are suspected to have released PFAS as well: the Great Lakes Naval Service Training Command and Fort Sheridan in Illinois and the Gary Army Aviation Support Facility in Indiana. 

The Duluth International Airport was cited as the only DOD site along Lake Superior to have a confirmed military PFAS discharge. 

The chemicals are most likely from the use of firefighting foam used to put out high-temperature fires like those that would occur when jet fuel ignites.

"They've been using this stuff for decades on various installations for gasoline fires or training exercises," Hayes said. "Then it gets sprayed off the tarmac, and it goes into streams and builds up and builds up." 

Chemicals first linked to airport in 2019

"Forever chemicals" were first detected at Milwaukee's airport in 2019, when DNR testing showed contaminated stormwater flowing to Wilson Park Creek, which drains into the Kinnickinnic River and eventually the lake and Oak Creek, which empties directly into the lake. 

The department ordered that the airport needed to determine the source of the contamination, prevent future discharges and develop a cleanup plan. At the time, levels were not high enough to be considered a public health concern, but the department wanted the water utility to monitor levels. 

Included in the testing results in 2019 were about six compounds, including PFOA and PFOS, two of the most researched PFAS chemicals. 

Though recommendations at the time called for wastewater utilities to start measuring for PFAS, no such rules have yet been instituted, because the utilities are not the source of chemicals but merely a receiver as the chemicals are washed down drains across the state. 

Milwaukee isn't the only city to face a PFAS contamination stemming from its airport. In Madison, contamination stemming from the Dane County Regional Airport — where the 115th Fighter Wing of the Wisconsin Air National Guard is stationed — has been linked to high levels of PFAS in a nearby lake and some nearby wells. 

On French Island, which is home to the La Crosse Regional Airport on one side and the Town of Campbell on the other, over a thousand people are receiving bottled water after PFAS were found in private drinking water across the island. Research into the airport's past has shown that ongoing testing of PFAS-containing firefighting foam and foam used to put out blazes caused by plane crashes are likely responsible for most of the contamination. 

PFAS are a family of man-made chemicals used for their water- and stain-resistant qualities in products like clothing and carpet, nonstick cookware, packaging and firefighting foam. The family includes 5,000 compounds, which are persistent, remaining both in the environment and the human body over time.

MORE:What are PFAS? Here's what you need to know about the emerging contaminant group known as 'forever chemicals' 

PFAS have been linked to types of kidney and testicular cancers, lower birth weights, harm to immune and reproductive systems, and altered hormone regulation and thyroid hormones.

Fish consumption advisories due to PFAS contamination have been issued across the state of Wisconsin, but none yet exist for Lake Michigan. 

Last year, an advisory for Lake Superior recommended that anglers and fish fry fans do not consume rainbow smelt more than once a month after tests revealed they were accumulating the chemicals in their tissue. 

Laura Schulte can be reached at leschulte@jrn.com and on Twitter at @SchulteLaura.