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TESTIMONY: Hawaii County General Plan 2045: Leeward Planning Commission <br /> January 16-17, 2025 p. 4 <br /> Freshwater is provided to PTA by trucking, a major operation that requires about 4,000 <br /> trucks a year with 5,000 gallons each of potable water. The cost is over three million <br /> dollars a year. The Army entered into a cooperative project in 2013 to drill at PTA to <br /> see if freshwater could be found to provide supply for PTA. The plan was to drill a hole <br /> over 6,000 feet deep to encounter the saline level at sea level and hope that freshwater <br /> reservoirs were found above this saline level. Surprisingly, the drill hole encountered a <br /> perched freshwater reservoir at a 600-foot depth. <br /> (https-//www.dvidshub.net/news/229643/army-taps-consortium-find-water-training-area- <br /> high-up-hawaiian-volcano). <br /> Any near-surface reservoir could easily become contaminated from the toxins used <br /> during training exercises, just as the unlined ponds for fracking development have <br /> leached through the porous overburden into groundwater. The freshwater perched <br /> reservoir found was never developed. This drilling occurred in 2013 and it is unknown if <br /> the contamination from the PTA surface operations contaminated that shallow <br /> freshwater reservoir. Such a potential pollution source is described below but it is not <br /> the only one that could provide contaminants for underground water sources. <br /> A major concern of groundwater pollution today is "forever chemicals", those per- and <br /> polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), commonly used in fire-fighting foams, which do not <br /> breakdown in the environment contribute greatly to health risks. The U.S. Army has <br /> been analyzing for those "forever chemicals" that have been part of the releases into the <br /> environment from their training activities at PTA and Kilauea Military Reservation. <br /> (https-//aec.a rm y.m i I/aec/6616/9869/7418/Pl-A-KM R-P FAS_PAS 1.pdf). <br /> The analyses so far seem to have been only conducted in soils and not groundwater. <br /> This 2023 report states that, for PTA, historical reports place ground water levels <br /> several hundred to 1 ,000 feet or more below the surface and so they were not sampled. <br /> It is incongruous that this 2023 report ignored the perched groundwater table found at <br /> 600 feet below the surface as it was being considered for a potable water source. <br /> Testing it would have provided important information on the rate of movement of <br /> contaminants below the surface. The Army has established their own risk-based <br /> screening concentration levels above which they would conduct further studies for <br /> remedial action. That level was set at 70 parts per trillion. In a report of July 2023, <br /> concentrations in soils were found at PTA above those levels (Table ES-1 in <br /> https://aec.army.miI/aec/6616/9869/7418/PTA-KMR PFAS PASI.pdf). <br />