Should people be eating fish caught at Sweetwater Reservoir? Does the EPA regulate that? Or is that a different agency?

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) or Department of Drinking Water (DDW) don’t provide any guidance related to posting notices about fish and wildlife in reservoirs. With this established, the EPA has developed unenforceable water quality criteria and informal benchmarks to help states and authorized Tribes protect aquatic ecosystems from several PFAS. The levels of PFAS found in the reservoir are much lower than either the acute or chronic water quality benchmarks. These criteria can be found at www.epa.gov/wqc/pfas-and-aquatic-life.

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1. What are PFAS and where do they come from? How did PFAS end up in our water? Why are we hearing about it now?
2. We have several sources of water in Sweetwater Authority service area: the reservoirs, the wells, and the desal plant? Are they all affected by this?
3. Who is responsible for PFAS contamination? Is Sweetwater Authority pursuing legal action against the manufacturers of PFAS?
4. Should people be eating fish caught at Sweetwater Reservoir? Does the EPA regulate that? Or is that a different agency?
5. How will I know if there is PFAS in my drinking water?