HONOLULU — The battle to hold the U.S. military accountable for tainting public drinking water with jet fuel from the Red Hill bulk fuel storage facility continues almost a year after thousands of residents were sickened and displaced last year.

In November, a major jet fuel leak at the facility caused high amounts of petroleum to enter Oahu’s main water supply, and the military has been accused of trying to stay quiet about it.

After cleanup and flushing, the U.S. Navy and Hawaii Department of Health now insist the water is currently safe for drinking. But the Red Hill tanks have still not been defueled and months after the leak, officials have continued to document issues with petroleum traces in the water shafts and poor maintenance of the public water systems by the military. 

Here’s what you need to know about the ongoing issue at Red Hill.

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EPA reports document issues with water system, military failures

Recent reports from the Environmental Protection Agency found that “both the U.S. Navy and U.S. Army have failed to adequately operate and maintain their public water system,” according to the agency’s website.

The reports come from the EPA’s National Enforcement Investigations Center’s week-long investigation of the Navy’s Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam (JBPHH) and the U.S. Army’s Aliamanu Military Reservation (AMR) in compliance with the Safe Drinking Water Act regulations. Inspectors observed “a visible sheen on the surface,” a “fuel-like smell,” and rusted or unlabeled pipes.

An EPA spokesperson told USA TODAY it’s too early to say what the findings will lead to and that it is “part of an ongoing enforcement investigation of the JBPHH drinking water system.”