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Water quality scientist Sarah Erickson is ...
Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post
Water quality scientist Sarah Erickson collects samples from fish caught around the Fountain Creek area for PFAS testing at Fountain Creek Regional Park in Fountain on Sept. 9, 2020.
Kevin Hamm of The Denver Post.
UPDATED:

More than a hundred drinking water sources across Colorado — ranging from cities and counties to elementary schools and campgrounds — contain what are now considered to be potentially hazardous levels of PFAS, toxic “forever chemicals” linked to a slew of health problems, data from 2020 shows.

Read Conrad Swanson’s full story, “No safe level”: A lot of Colorado drinking water could contain potentially hazardous levels of “forever chemicals” under new EPA standard


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