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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Arnold-Jones
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
3-01-07
HM 24
SHORT TITLE Protest Federal Arsenic Standards
SB
ANALYST Aubel
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB 677, SB 710 Duplicates SM 24
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
New Mexico Environment Department (NMED)
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
New Mexico Municipal League (NMML)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Memorial 24 requests that the Governor and the Environment Department request U.S.
Congress and the President to rescind the decision by the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) to lower the arsenic standard for drinking water.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
No fiscal impact.
pg_0002
House Memorial 24 – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The question raised in HM 24 is whether as a policy matter the State should request the EPA
rescind the arsenic standard. The two primary issues involve the risk arsenic poses to public
health and the cost of implementing the new standard.
On June 22, 2000, EPA proposed a new drinking water standard of 5 parts per billion (ppb) for
arsenic and requested comment on options of 3 ppb, 10 ppb, and 20 ppb. EPA evaluated over
6,500 pages of comments from 1,100 responders. Under the Safe Drinking Water Act
Amendments of 1996, EPA issued the rule on January 22, 2001 that set the standard at 10 ppb.
The rule gave water systems five years (until January 23, 2006) to come into compliance with
the new standard for arsenic. According to DOH, in New Mexico in 2004, an estimated 100
public water supply systems in the state, representing a service population approximating 756
thousand (40 percent of the state population) were affected by the 2001 standard.
NMED notes that numerous public drinking water systems in New Mexico have already begun
or completed construction of treatment to comply with the lower Maximum Contaminant Load
(MCL), including Albuquerque, the City of Santa Fe, Columbus, Espanola, La Union MDWCA,
Los Lunas, and Rio Rancho. According to NMED, about 24 municipalities have not begun the
process.
The cost to implement the new standard is substantial and includes both infrastructure and
operating components, which HM 24 identifies. During the 2007 Legislative Session alone,
approximately $30 million is listed in capital outlay requests for water infrastructure needs
related to reducing arsenic in public systems. In addition, SB 677 is requesting $10 million
general fund annually to establish a new fund for providing grants to help communities comply
with the arsenic standard.
Arsenic is an established human carcinogen that occurs naturally in drinking water in New
Mexico. International studies have shown that chronic consumption of water containing arsenic
in excess of 400 micrograms per liter (ug/l) is associated with increased risks of skin cancer and
various internal cancers, particularly bladder and lung. The 2001 EPA reduction from 50 to 10
ppm was based on low-dose extrapolation of the international data and risk assessment modeling
indicating excess cancer risks below the 50 ppm level.
The impact of lower levels of arsenic on public health is an issue that has no clear consensus.
However, DOH does submit that DOH and the University of New Mexico conducted a study to
examine age-adjusted bladder cancer incidence rates in New Mexico in relation to drinking water
arsenic levels, as follows:
Information on bladder cancer newly diagnosed among New Mexico residents between
1988 and 2002 was obtained from the state cancer registry and linked at the census tract
level with drinking water arsenic regulatory compliance data using a geographic
information system (GIS). A positive significant association was observed between
arsenic in drinking water and the age-adjusted incidence of bladder transitional cell
carcinoma in the White population of New Mexico, but not the Hispanic population.
Among Whites, bladder cancer incidence in areas above the arsenic MCL was
statistically-elevated by 16% over that in areas below the MCL. Excess incidence in
areas with drinking water estimated to contain more than 20.0 micrograms per liter
(ug/l)
arsenic was roughly twice that of areas with between 10.1 and 20.0 ug/l arsenic. The risk
estimates remained largely unchanged when analyzed across various potential
pg_0003
House Memorial 24 – Page
3
confounders, including area education and poverty measures, population density, nativity,
residential mobility, and tumor
stage at diagnosis and sequence.
Additional health effects, such as learning disabilities, depression, and increased
cardiovascular problems (high blood pressure and chronic heart disease), have been
recently reported in the literature associated with arsenic at low levels in drinking water,
including those levels between 10 ug/l and 50 ug/l.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
NMED states that if NMED did not comply with the federal arsenic standard, its primacy under
the federal Safe Drinking Water Act would be put at risk, thereby jeopardizing federal grants of
over $1.0 million to assist public water systems.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to SB 677, which would establish a fund to place grants in communities to upgrade
public water systems to meet the new EPA arsenic standard.
Duplicates SM 24.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
EMNRD points to a related issue: in areas where there is significant arsenic in the soils, oil field
workers are subject to higher exposure levels; however this issue is not addressed by either HM
24 or by the more stringent EPA arsenic level standards in drinking water.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
No request will be made to the President or the U.S. Congress for the EPA to rescind the lower
arsenic standard.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
1.
How can New Mexico address the underlying policy issue of federal requirements placed
on the state without substantive or supplementary federal funding to implement the
requirements.
2.
How can the state encourage development of low-cost technologies for arsenic reduction
in drinking water.
3.
What is the status of the ARS electroflocculation and filtration pilot project for arsenic
removal being tested in Bernalillo.
MA/mt