
This is basic. We should be able to fill a glass and cook dinner without wondering what’s in it. Safety shouldn’t depend on our ZIP code. We want air that doesn’t trigger headaches or asthma. Water we can trust. Food that doesn’t make us second-guess every bite.
This isn’t about politics—it’s about our bodies. The health of our loved ones. Our families eating dinner. We need clear info: what gets tested, how often, what happens when something fails, and who sounds the alarm. If we shrug and “deal with it,” we leave our children with problems that get harder and more expensive to clean up.
What Safety Means:
The Conversations Worth Having: