CONCORD, NH — Ensuring the drinking water New Hampshire residents draw from the tap and hand to their children is clean and safe is an essential job of government, Gov. Chris Sununu said.
With that comment, Sununu signed three new water protection bills Tuesday during a ceremony at the Executive Council offices. Lawmakers who worked in a bipartisan fashion to pass House Bill 235, House Bill 236, and House Bill 271, attended the event and celebrated the advancements toward a healthier future for all in the Granite State.
Prime sponsor of the legislation, Rep. Rosemarie Rung, D-Merrimack, said: “This legislation is monumental in allowing the Department of Environmental Services to develop limits on these carcinogens as well as grant critical funding to hundreds of Granite State families who are impacted daily by dangerous water conditions.
“Everyone deserves the ability to drink their water without fear of health consequences. I am so proud that Democrats sponsored this critical initiative that has the potential to save so many lives in the Granite State,” Rung said.
There is $50 million available to communities for remediation efforts on a cost-share basis.
Senate President Chuck Morse, R-Salem, said the state has made a lot of headway in the past few years on water protection measures. He said the legislature has heard from many communities on concern for potential PFAS contamination and what those contaminants can do to the health of citizens, particularly children. The state set up a $50 million fund to make sure we had money to help communities through this, he said, and the bill is “a winning formula for the state and communities to work together.”
Bob Scott, commissioner of the Department of Environmental Services, said 320 cities and towns will benefit from these three bills. He thanked the governor and a bipartisan effort in the House and Senate.
Scott said this is “one more place where the New Hampshire advantage is taking hold.”
The governor said people are really putting faith in government when they can pour a glass full of water from the tap and hand it to their children.
“We have been making a lot of investments,” and these bills are just building upon what the state is doing to provide for a healthy environment, Sununu said.
This story was originally published by InDepth NH.
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