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This article is from the Wall Street Journal:

FOR YEARS, FLIERS have worried about everything from stuffy cabin air to bad

meals. But what about the water? While airlines insist it's safe to drink,

some little-noticed studies from Japan to the Netherlands have turned up

some unfriendly bacteria in the tank water, including E. coli and the germ

that causes Legionnaire's disease. U.S. researchers have tested it, too,

with mixed results that suggest you don't know what you're drinking.

But we do - because we tested it. We packed sample vials and took to the

skies, hopping on 14 different flights everywhere from Atlanta to Sydney,

Australia. On each, we collected water from the galley and lavatory taps,

sealed them up and sent them to a lab for analysis. The results of our

water-quality snapshot: a long list of microscopic life you don't want to

drink, from Salmonella and Staphylococcus to tiny insect eggs. Worse,

contamination was the rule, not the exception: Almost all of the bacteria

levels were tens, sometimes hundreds, of times above U.S. government limits.

" This water is not potable by any means, " says Hendrickson, the

director of Hoosier Microbiology Laboratories in Muncie, Ind., which tested

our samples.

The good news, of course, is that this water isn't the main drinking

supply for passengers, who usually get bottled H2O from the beverage carts.

But plenty of people depend on the plane's taps to wash their hands and

brush their teeth. And while the airlines say they rarely serve tap water,

many flight attendants say it isn't that uncommon: When the bottled water

runs out, they turn to the tanks - which, under federal regulations, are

supposed to provide drinkable water. " It's the way our service works, " says

Sara Dela Cruz, a spokeswoman for the union of United Airlines attendants.

For their part, the airlines say they closely follow federal

guidelines for drinking water, and say no passengers have ever complained

about getting sick from it. " It's absolutely drinkable, " says a United

spokesman. They called our water tests unscientific, and said our own

samplers could have contaminated the results. " Someone with dirty hands must

have used that sink, " said a spokesman from National Airlines, where the

lavatory sample came back positive for coliform.

But our experts said human contamination wouldn't explain all our

results. Some of the water we collected on a short flight to St. Louis, for

example, contained Pasteurella pneumotropica, a bacterium primarily carried

by rodents. Similarly, our Chicago-to-Los Angeles trip turned up

Pseudomonas, a highly resistant bacterium associated with a range of

infections. And while the U.S. government sets a maximum bacterial level of

500 " colony-forming units " per milliliter for municipal drinking water, our

lab counted more than four million per milliliter in a single sample alone.

That's roughly the same bacterial concentration you find in a tainted raw

hamburger, Dr. Hendrickson says.

" If I were the airline, I would worry about what these results say

about the sanitation in their galleys, " says Abigail Salyers, outgoing

president of the American Society for Microbiology and a professor at the

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

This isn't the first time, of course, that airline cabins have raised

a health issue. Travelers have worried about everything from the quality of

recirculated air to the potentially fatal blood clots associated with

" economy-class syndrome. " But airlines' tank water may fly beneath the

radar, health experts say, because travelers wouldn't think of linking it to

any bugs they might pick up. " People blame it on where they've been, " says

Arthur Forni, an infectious-diseases physician at Westchester Medical Group

in New York.

WHEN BOTTLES RUN OUT

Still, at least some people try to avoid it - including a number of

flight attendants. " It doesn't taste good, " says , the health

coordinator for the union that represents American Airlines' flight

attendants. She says some attendants bring their own bottles to avoid the

stuff from the tanks - especially when it's the only thing left. Indeed, the

flight-attendant unions at American, Northwest, US Airways and United

confirm that they serve tap when water bottles run out, primarily on full

flights. " It happens fairly frequently, " Ms. says.

Do they tell fliers? Only if they ask. " It's not like we have some

huge sign saying 'This is Tap Water,' " she says. In response, American says

serving tap water would violate company policy. (Other carriers said the

same thing, although several had earlier acknowledged that tap water could

get served.) " When bottled water runs out, we offer canned distilled water, "

says a Continental spokesman.

Our own suspicions about the water came from an unlikely quarter:

Zach Bjornson-Hooper, a home-schooled 13-year-old from Alamo, Calif., who

became curious about airline tap water when he saw a flight attendant

pouring it for passengers. " My parents own a sailboat, " he says, " and I know

we don't drink the tank water on that. " So as part of a science project, he

took samples during a trip to Australia and New Zealand - and watched later

as colonies grew on his petri dishes. " I got fairly grossed out, " he says.

In our tests, we thought the length of the flight, or the country in

which it originated, might affect the results. It didn't. While our lab

turned up 750 colonies per milliliter during a Chicago-Mexico City flight,

we found millions of colonies on that short hop to St. Louis. Among our

other findings: Salmonella, a well-known bacterium that can cause violent

illness, on a Continental flight to Newark, N.J. Then there were the eggs:

On a United flight, our lab found aquatic insect eggs that, after a few

days, hatched into maggots. " I've never seen it in all the 26 years I have

been testing water, " Dr. Hendrickson says.

To be sure, much of the bacteria we found aren't harmful - one that

showed up in many samples is commonly found in soil. Even the most

unfriendly bacteria don't necessarily cause illness either. And foolproof

testing isn't possible: As airlines pointed out, our samples weren't taken

under sterilized conditions onboard. " It's unscientific, " said a spokesman

for Continental, who said the Salmonella could have come from a customer's

hands. The Air Transport Association, which represents the industry, says

our methods were " not consistent with scientific protocols. "

But the microbiologists we talked to said the results are valid - we

followed guidelines recommended by our lab and recognized by the

Environmental Protection Agency. What's more, other studies have turned up

similar results. In 1999, the Japanese government found excessive bacteria

levels in one-third of 65 planes it tested at Narita Airport outside Tokyo.

The following year, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines found traces of the bacteria

that causes Legionnaire's disease in one jet. And last January, E. coli was

found on the aircraft used by Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien. (The

Canadian Department of National Defense says no one became sick.)

'NOT A PRIORITY'

So who's regulating this? The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is

responsible for the quality of airports' water facilities, like hoses and

hydrants. The Federal Aviation Administration is also involved, requiring

airlines to clean and flush their onboard tanks (the schedule can vary, but

is usually done every 12 to 14 months, the FAA says). And once the water's

onboard, it falls under the regulation of the EPA, which requires airlines

to clean tanks quarterly and confirm their water complies with federal

standards.

But the agencies say they leave most of the monitoring to the

airlines. The EPA says spot-checks are rare because airplane water is " not a

priority " compared to all the other water systems the agency tracks, says

Bill Diamond, the director of the agency's Drinking Water Protection

division. The FDA, meanwhile, says it's never found problems with the water

in airline tanks, and holds inspections only when complaints come up. Still,

the FDA has issued six warning letters since 1997 that might disturb some

fliers: It found a " dead mosquito-type insect " in an AirTran Airways potable

water cart, and cited Northwest for not maintaining " clean and sanitary

potable water stations " at its storage system in Detroit. It also warned

American Eagle, American's commuter branch, for not having a splash-back

valve on a hydrant that supplied drinking and chemically treated lavatory

water. (Airlines say all of the violations have been resolved.)

Still, travelers may have something to look forward to. Based on

public concerns raised in recent years, the FDA says it's now starting a

program to take regular samples of airline water. And at least one carrier

concedes airlines should be doing more: After its own voluntary spot checks,

KLM suggested carriers world-wide were vulnerable to similar contamination

and advocated creating official water-quality test programs.

That's good news for veteran fliers who worry about the water from

time to time. But Baldauf, a 35-year-old attorney from Madison, N.J.,

isn't taking any chances. He packs a backpack full of bottled water on every

flight. " I don't want to run the risk, " he says.

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