But Kyla Bennett, director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility in New England, found it “disappointing.”
”I thought that the goals were wimpy … and I thought the language was a little slippery,” she said.
She said she’d hoped the report would include more urgent timelines, including plans to ban some products that contain PFAS, like AAAS firefighting foam, immediately. She is also concerned that the focus on “intentionally-added” PFAS could allow some manufacturers to skirt regulations.