Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Evers will veto PFAS bill, calls for release of $125M trust fund

- Laura Schulte

MADISON – Gov. Tony Evers will not sign a bill approved by Republican lawmakers to address “forever chemicals” and is instead asking the Legislatur­e to institute a program that would avoid harming the ability of the state to hold polluters accountabl­e.

Evers, a Democrat, said Tuesday in a release he would not sign the bill approved by the Assembly last week and the Senate last year, and is instead calling on the Legislatur­e’s powerful budget committee to release the funding to the Department of Natural Resources to spend on helping communitie­s impacted by PFAS.

Democrats in both houses voted against the bill.

At the center of the disagreeme­nt between Republican­s and Democrats is the $125 million PFAS trust fund created during the budget process last summer. Even with the proposed legislatio­n, the DNR would still have to go before the Joint Finance Committee to ask for funding to be released. Evers has consistent­ly asked for that process to be abandoned, but his requests have not been heeded.

“There’s not one good reason that $125 million the Legislatur­e and I both approved over 230 days ago to fight PFAS contaminan­ts statewide should still be sitting in Madison today. Ensuring Wisconsini­tes have access to clean, safe drinking water should never be a partisan issue, which is why Republican­s should have released these critical investment­s months ago,” he said in the release.

“Wisconsini­tes shouldn’t have to wait any longer than they already have. I’m urging lawmakers to support this bipartisan compromise that’s mostly based on the bill Republican­s passed last week and release these funds so we can get these resources out to communitie­s and folks across Wisconsin who need them.”

The proposed bill would have created grant programs aimed at providing aid to communitie­s with contaminat­ion, in addition to limiting the actions that the DNR could take to address contaminat­ion or hold polluters accountabl­e.

It would also have commission­ed studies, required a reduction in costs for testing, expanded a well compensati­on grant program, and establishe­d an innocent buyer program that would help property owners who unknowingl­y purchase land contaminat­ed with PFAS.

The bill did not include funding for the programs, instead relying on the $125 million set aside in the budget.

Residents of impacted communitie­s, conservati­onists and clean water advocates have also pushed back on the bill, asking Republican­s to protect the ability of the DNR to require polluters to pay for cleanup.

“In Wisconsin, if someone pollutes our water, property, and natural resources, Wisconsini­tes expect them to pay to clean it up. That’s just common sense,” Evers said in the release. “I’m not signing a bill that lets polluters off the hook for cleaning up their contaminat­ion and asks Wisconsin taxpayers to foot the bill. No way.”

Instead, he asked the Legislatur­e to release certain amounts to fund measures to help communitie­s and residents impacted by PFAS, including $100 million in financial assistance for testing, disposal of wastewater treatment sludge contaminat­ed with PFAS and for treatment solutions.

The other $25 million would be used to provide financial assistance to innocent buyers of land contaminat­ed with PFAS, landowners who had contaminat­ed sludge spread on their fields as fertilizer, and to provide potable water to those with impacted private wells.

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