Auditor jumped gun on MTBE risk, official says
By John D. Cox, Bee Staff Writer 
Copyright 1998 Sacramento Bee
December 24, 1998
A critical state auditor's report about bureaucratic handling of MTBE 
contamination in groundwater drew a mixed response Wednesday from California's 
chief drinking water watchdog. 
While he agreed with several recommendations in the report that would 
streamline the state regulatory process, David P. Spath 
said the report jumped to a conclusion about the 
risk to public health posed by the gasoline additive. 
"They jumped to a conclusion that it's a carcinogen," said Spath, and the assumption colors the auditors' criticism
of the pace of 
the state response as MTBE has turned up in some drinking water 
supplies in the last few years, most seriously in South Lake Tahoe and Santa 
Monica.  
The auditor's report said that while the state had 
"ample evidence that gasoline leaking from underground storage tanks is 
jeopardizing the safety of our drinking-water supplies, it has not acted 
quickly and decisively to address this potential health hazard." 
Earlier this month, however, a state scientific panel commissioned by the state 
Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment concluded that it did not have 
enough evidence to conclude that MTBE posed a threat of causing 
cancer in humans. 
The panel's findings were consistent with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 
guidelines, which list the gas additive as a 
"possible human carcinogen." Existing 
studies on the effects of the chemical on laboratory animals are based on 
inhaling MTBE vapors rather than drinking contaminated water. 
Spath said the recent findings support the state's decision in 1996 that the 
presence of MTBE in some groundwater supplies did not meet the legal 
definitions of 
a public health emergency. 
"I don't think it's settled yet," Spath said of the public health question. 
"That's something that may take a longer period of time." 
Methyl tertiary-butyl ether, or MTBE, is an additive required in gasoline sold 
in California to 
help the state meet federal clean air requirements, but the bitter-tasting, 
odorous chemical is showing up increasingly in drinking water supplies. 
Requested by the Legislature, the auditor's report cited 
"multiple shortcomings" in the drinking water regulations by the state Department of Health 
Services division headed by Spath and by the State Water Resources Control 
Board. 
It listed a number of recommendations for improvements in the way the two 
agencies, and also the California Environmental Protection Agency, monitor and 
enforce drinking-water safety standards. 
"There are a number of points that they 
made that are valid points," said Spath, particularly recommendations to improve communications among 
agencies and to bring about timely reporting of drinking-water monitoring data. 
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