September 19th, 2025
NATIONAL – The National PFAS Contamination Coalition strongly denounces the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) recent legal filing to withdraw and vacate maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) for four toxic PFAS chemicals — GenX, PFNA, PFBS, and PFHxS — that were legally established in 2024.
Instead of defending the nation’s first-ever enforceable drinking water standards for PFAS, the EPA is now actively aligning with chemical manufacturers and water utility lobbyists who have sought to weaken or eliminate these protections through lawsuits. These motions represent a dangerous betrayal of the agency’s mission and a direct assault on the health of millions of Americans.
“Lee Zeldin seems set on abandoning the life-saving Maximum Contamination Limits introduced by a more functional iteration of the agency. Regulation for these toxic chemicals would have provided greater assurance for safe drinking water across the nation. This legal filing has begun a process that deteriorates not only the health of families across the country but also further erodes the public’s trust in government institutions and corporate interests alike.” Said Victor Davila, co-facilitator of the National PFAS Contamination Coalition and Clean Water Director at Slingshot.
“Once again we are faced with the hard truths that the current administration will put corporate influences before the very people they were to represent and above all, have a duty to protect. What an appalling setback. I, like many others living in a PFAS contaminated community, have direct experience and understand the consequences of compromising the health and safety of people’s lives with polluters’ interests. Abandoning progress that was made over the last few years to ensure safe drinking water for families across our nation is an insult to those harmed by PFAS and certainly many more in the future.” Jennifer Rawlison, Newburgh Clean Water Project
“By abandoning these critical standards, the EPA has chosen to protect corporate profits over public health,” said Sandy Wynn, Co-facilitator, National PFAS Contamination Coalition. “Communities poisoned by PFAS fought for decades to secure safe drinking water. The agency’s reversal is nothing short of a gift to industry and a devastating blow to families already living with the health impacts of PFAS exposure.”
“Our communities are being poisoned—through water, food, air, and products—while corporations profit. PFAS forever chemicals are forever. Public health must never be sacrificed for profit. Enough is enough. We demand accountability, transparency, and urgent action. Clean water, clean air, and safe food are human rights—not bargaining chips for industry.” – Hope Grosse Co-founder Buxmont Coalition for Safer Water, PA
“By abandoning these critical standards, the EPA has chosen to protect corporate profits over public health. Communities poisoned by PFAS fought for decades to secure safe drinking water. The agency’s reversal is nothing short of a gift to industry and a devastating blow to families already living with the health impacts of PFAS exposure.” Cindy Boyle, Save Our Water S.O.H2O – Wisconsin
“This is a victory for companies like Chemours and no one else.” – Emily Donovan, co-founder of Clean Cape Fear
“We only have to look back at the response by the first manufacturers of PFAS chemicals to realize that a lack of action is detrimental to human health and the environment. Having prior knowledge and consciously choosing to not take action is negligence. Praemonitus, praemunitus.”– Cheryl M. Cail Acting Chief, Waccamaw Indian People
Background
- In 2024, the EPA finalized legally enforceable drinking water standards for six PFAS under the Safe Drinking Water Act.
- September 11, 2025, the EPA filed a motion in the D.C. Circuit Court to withdraw and vacate standards for GenX, PFNA, PFBS, and PFHxS.
- These filings come in direct response to lawsuits filed by the chemical industry and water utility associations — industries with deep financial interests in avoiding accountability for PFAS contamination.
Why This Matters
PFAS, also known as “forever chemicals,” are linked to cancer, liver and kidney damage, immune dysfunction, reproductive harm, and developmental issues. Communities across the country rely on these standards as the only line of defense against decades of unchecked pollution. Weakening or eliminating them directly exposes millions to unnecessary and preventable harm.
Even more contradictory, at the same time the EPA is preserving maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) for the legacy compounds PFOA and PFOS, a September 8 EPA motion filed in the AFFF MDL (Multi District Litigation) moved to actively review PFOA and PFOS hazardous substance designation under CERCLA, signaling the EPA may reconsider that rule. This reversal would strip communities of one of the most powerful legal tools available to hold major industrial polluters accountable for cleanup costs.
By maintaining the MCLs while eliminating the CERCLA threat, the EPA is effectively admitting: there is too much science to ignore PFOA and PFOS completely, but this new EPA will make sure that enforcement is as painless as possible for industry. This strategy prioritizes polluter protection over public health and undermines decades of work to secure accountability.
The Coalition’s Call
The National PFAS Contamination Coalition calls on the EPA to:
1. Immediately withdraw its motions to vacate the four PFAS standards.
2. Defend the legally established 2024 rule in full, as required under the Safe Drinking Water Act’s anti-backsliding provisions.
3. Prioritize public health, not industry profits, in all regulatory decisions.
“This is not a neutral legal maneuver — it is a calculated decision that prioritizes polluters over people. The EPA must be held accountable,” said Victor Davila, co-facilitator of the National PFAS Contamination Coalition and Clean Water Director at Slingshot.
About the National PFAS Contamination Coalition
The National PFAS Contamination Coalition is a grassroots alliance of community groups across the United States working to end PFAS pollution, demand corporate accountability, and secure safe drinking water for all.
