EPA to Limit Cancer-Causing Manmade Chemicals in Drinking Water

Reuters / Carlos Barria The Environmental Protection Agency is setting a limit on the level of toxic cancer-causing chemicals allowed in drinking water.
The agency will announce a plan Thursday to control a group of manmade chemicals known as PFAs—found in non-stick cookware and stain-resistant carpeting—which are linked to cancer as well as liver and thyroid damage.
It’s not yet known what the specific permitted level for the toxic substances will be, but drinking water systems around the country will be tested for the chemicals to make sure they’re at lower levels than they were at a previous round of testing in 2012.
It was previously reported by Politico that the EPA had no intention to limit the chemicals, which are believed to be contaminating millions of Americans’ tap water.
Alex Jones—the Infowars conspiracy theorist who falsely claimed that the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting, which left 27 people dead, was a false-flag operation—will be forced to submit to a sworn deposition as part of a defamation lawsuit the victims’ families filed against him.
Connecticut Judge Barbara Bellis made the ruling Wednesday that will see Jones answer questions during a five-hour deposition.
Bellis also ordered three other defendants to be deposed who are “critical to Infowars’ business operations,” according to the Sandy Hook families.
Bellis previously ruled that Jones must turn over Infowars’ internal financial, business, and marketing documents.
Mark Barden, whose son Daniel was one of 20 first-graders killed in the shooting, said: “It is far beyond time that [Jones] be held accountable for the pain his false narratives have caused so many and today’s ruling brings us one step closer to doing that.” Jones has repeatedly denied the defamation allegations.

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