
Outrage + Optimism: The Climate Podcast It’s In Our Blood: Communities vs Forever Chemicals
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Apr 16, 2026 Sarah Alexander, executive director who led legal and policy fights to protect farms from PFAS contamination. Emily Donovan, community organizer who exposed PFAS in North Carolina and helped win first federal drinking water standards. They trace contaminated soil, water and food, recount local investigations and legal wins, and debate how communities can defend progress as regulators and industry push back.
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PFAS Are Ubiquitous Persistent Pollutants
- PFAS are hundreds to thousands of persistent chemicals that spread through air, water, soil and bioaccumulate in humans.
- Christiana notes EPA/US data shows nearly all US people have measurable PFAS, and EU monitoring finds widespread river, lake and coastal exceedances.
Maine Farmers Found PFAS From Sewage Sludge
- Sarah Alexander recounts Maine's first farm PFAS detection in 2016 traced from community water testing to sludge-applied fields.
- Decades of federally sanctioned sewage sludge spreading concentrated PFAS and contaminated at least 90 Maine farms after expanded testing.
Wilmington Found GenX In Tap Water
- Emily Donovan's community discovered GenX in Wilmington tap water in 2017 after a scientist tested locally and found extreme levels.
- That revealed broken protections: no state or federal guidelines meant utilities could claim compliance despite contamination.
