Lead contamination near Marine Corps shooting range raises local health concerns

Lead and antimony contamination detected in soil samples near the Marine Corps shooting range at Ewa Beach has sparked calls for further investigation amid worries from neighbors and state officials over health risks.

Christina Jedra reports for Honolulu Civil Beat.


In short:

  • Testing found lead levels exceeding state safety limits in six sites near the Pu‘uloa Range, with one sample showing levels 26 times above acceptable thresholds.
  • Health officials urge further testing to assess contamination risks to nearby neighborhoods and to state waters, as traceable dust and erosion may carry toxins.
  • Community members, backed by a state legislator, are pushing for the range’s relocation due to potential exposure risks.

Key quote:

“They need to follow through and correct the problem. The health of our fragile ecosystems and public health should not pay the price.”

— Hanna Lilley, Hawaii regional manager of the Surfrider Foundation

Why this matters:

Lead and antimony contamination poses significant health risks, particularly to children and pregnant women. Potential spread through dust or water channels increases the chance of exposure for nearby communities, highlighting a need for transparent oversight and potential remediation.

Related EHN coverage:

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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