<p>PFAS contamination has been found in 13 private wells out of 96 that were tested south of the Martha’s Vineyard Airport, environmental consultants working for the airport have confirmed.</p>
PFAS contamination has been found in 13 private wells out of 96 that were tested south of the Martha’s Vineyard Airport, environmental consultants working for the airport have confirmed.
In an email that went out Saturday, Ron Myrick, director of remediation for Tetra Tech, said with the majority of the testing now finished, a full report will be sent to the state Department of Environmental Protection by Jan. 19. A public meeting will be scheduled some time after that to discuss the results, he said.
Found in firefighting foam, Per and Polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) turned up in monitoring wells at the airport last summer. Subsequent testing led to more comprehensive sampling in private wells south of the airport beginning in November. PFAS can pose dangers to human health when ingested.
A total of 96 wells were sampled in the first phase of the investigation, Mr. Myrick said.
Thirteen wells, or approximately 14 per cent, exceeded safe limits of 70 parts per trillion as outlined in state DEP guidelines, he said.
Most of the wells that tested above safe limits are located near the West Tisbury Road south of the airport, he also said.
Consultants are now preparing what they called an “immediate response action plan” to send to the state. The plan and report will be made public online when it goes to the state.
Mr. Myrick also thanked residents for their cooperation.
“We would like to thank the residents in the study area for their assistance and cooperation through the first phase of this investigation. We have generated a large volume of data to better understand the issue and develop appropriate solutions,” he wrote.

Comments
The remedy to aid the
George Stein EdgartownThe remedy to aid the cleansing the wells might be news worthy.
The only way to'clense' the
MikeD WTThe only way to'clense' the water from your well is to use a carbon filter
All properties south of the airport should install a whole house cabon filter
These substances do not break down over time
They will continue to move into the water table over time
Essentially eventually contaminating the entire aqua source
The testing showed over a dozen contaminated wells
My guess is they are close to WTET road
In 10 years the'plume' will have expanded, maybe alittle more diluted, but it will and is spreading
The AP needs to proved carbon filters for all wells that potentially will be effected
2 mile radius to the south to start
That would bring you the ocean down in most cases
Add new comment