STN
ALABAMA GATEWAY | THE SUN TIMES NEWS
LIVE
MARINE FLIGHTS JOBS BOARD REAL ESTATE RESOURCES & FUNDING
⌘K Search  ·  ↑↓ Navigate  ·  Enter Open  ·  Esc Close
Below top navigation · highest visibility 728 × 90

Toxic exposure & cumulative burden

PFAS contamination sites, lead-exposure testing, and EJScreen environmental-justice indices — the cumulative-exposure story for {STATE.name} communities. Sources: EGLE PFAS Inventory, MDHHS testing data, and the EPA EJScreen environmental-justice mapping tool.

Alabama PFAS Sites — EGLE MPART Contamination Map

Source: Alabama PFAS Action Response Team (MPART) · EGLE · live via /api/pfas

What this tracks

Locations of confirmed PFAS ("forever chemical") contamination sites across Alabama, monitored by the Alabama PFAS Action Response Team (MPART).

Live status
Loading current data…
What this means

PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are a family of ~12,000 man-made chemicals nicknamed "forever chemicals" because they don't break down in the environment or the human body. Alabama was the first state to set enforceable drinking-water limits (2020). MPART tracks 200+ confirmed contamination sites — many from military bases, industrial sites, and firefighting foam.

What you can do
  • If you're on a private well within a few miles of a known PFAS site, request a free EGLE well test.
  • Boiling water does NOT remove PFAS — use a certified reverse osmosis or activated-carbon filter rated for PFAS.
  • Most municipal water in MI now meets the federal MCL — check your annual Consumer Confidence Report.
  • Health effects with long exposure: thyroid, liver, immune-system, and some cancers — talk to your doctor if you're concerned.
Open the full PFAS sites monitored page →

Alabama Childhood Blood Lead Testing — MDHHS Surveillance

Source: MDHHS Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program (CLPPP)

What this tracks

Alabama blood-lead surveillance data by county — testing rates, elevated levels, and free testing locations. Lead poisoning prevention resources.

What this means

Alabama law requires every Medicaid-enrolled child to be tested for blood lead at ages 12 and 24 months, and any child with risk factors (older housing, recent immigration) at any age. The CDC blood-lead reference value is 3.5 µg/dL — children above that level get follow-up care. The Flint Water Crisis put Alabama's lead-testing infrastructure under a national microscope; testing rates have risen since 2016 but remain below state targets.

What you can do
  • Free blood-lead test for any child under 6: call your county health department or Medicaid.
  • If you live in a home built before 1978, assume lead paint may be present — wet-wipe windowsills weekly, use HEPA vacuum.
  • Have your home tested: certified lead inspectors at https://www.michigan.gov/mileadsafe
  • In Flint: free home water filters, certified bottled water, and lead testing are all available via the Genesee County Health Dept.
Open the full Lead exposure testing page →

Alabama Environmental Health Burden — CDC PLACES County Index

Source: CDC PLACES (Population Level Analysis and Community Estimates) · live via /api/places

What this tracks

Census-tract environmental health and chronic disease burden across Alabama from CDC PLACES. Asthma, COPD, cancer, cardiovascular, and air-quality impact.

Live status
Loading current data…
What this means

CDC PLACES is the first national project to map chronic disease rates, health behaviors, and prevention measures at the census-tract level. For Alabama it shows where asthma, COPD, cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease are concentrated — often overlapping with industrial corridors (downriver Detroit, southwest Detroit, central Saginaw) and historic redlining areas.

What you can do
  • Find your census tract's health profile at https://www.cdc.gov/places/
  • If you live in a high-asthma area, ask your doctor about an asthma action plan and free MDHHS home-visit programs.
  • EPA EJScreen maps cumulative environmental risk on top of this data: https://www.epa.gov/ejscreen
  • Detroit residents: free indoor air-quality assessments are available via the Detroit Health Department.
Open the full Environmental burden page →
← Back to the Alabama Gateway dashboard