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Advocates Demand Restored Funding to Combat Carcinogenic Water Contamination in Rural California

Advocates Demand Restored Funding to Combat Carcinogenic Water Contamination in Rural California

Clean water advocates are launching a coordinated push to restore full funding mechanisms for California's Safe and Affordable Funding for Equity and Resilience (SAFER) program. The effort comes amid growing concern that recent state budget adjustments will leave vulnerable rural communities without the necessary resources to transition away from contaminated groundwater wells.

The SAFER program's base budget was established at 130 million dollars, utilizing revenue generated by the state's cap-and-invest program. According to Brandon Bollinger of the Community Water Center, previous legislative agreements included protective language that automatically backfilled any funding shortfalls if cap-and-invest revenues underperformed. However, state lawmakers recently removed that backfill provision, raising alarms that long-term infrastructure projects in unincorporated areas may stall.

Advocates highlighted the ongoing struggles of residents living in unincorporated Monterey County communities, including Royal Oaks, Las Lomas, and Castroville. In these regions, small public water systems and private domestic wells have faced persistent contamination issues for years, forcing hundreds of families to live under substandard conditions.

Testing conducted by the Monterey County Public Health Bureau has identified a dangerous cocktail of chemical contaminants across regional water tables. These include nitrates, 1,2,3-Trichloropropane (TCP), per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), and hexavalent chromium, also known as chromium-6. Prolonged exposure to these substances through drinking or cooking water significantly elevates the risk of developing various forms of cancer. Bollinger noted that while the water often looks clear to the naked eye, chromium-6 and nitrates are particularly widespread across the Central Coast.

Implementing advanced filtration and treatment facilities capable of neutralizing these heavy chemicals can easily cost millions of dollars, an expense that is entirely unaffordable for small, low-income communities. Currently, a coalition of approximately 240 local households is working together to secure a centralized water solution. In the interim, many families are forced to rely on state-subsidized bottled water deliveries.

Local advocates emphasize that bottled water is an unsustainable bandage for a systemic issue, noting that every resident has a fundamental right to permanent, safe plumbing inside their homes. The group plans to continue lobbying state representatives to protect funding lines and guarantee environmental justice for the agricultural workers and families sustaining the region.

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By: CNN Newsource

May 18, 2026

SAFER programCalifornia water crisisCommunity Water CenterBrandon Bollingercontaminated wellschromium6nitrate pollutionCentral Coast infrastructureWatsonville2026
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Advocates Demand Restored Funding to Combat Carcinogenic Water Contamination in Rural California