The New Richmond City Council is scheduled to discuss potential changes to the treatment of the city’s water supply, including whether to remove fluoride, in a meeting Monday.
City Administrator Noah Wiedenfeld, discussed the potential changes in a Water Treatment Open House on Tuesday. Wiedenfeld said in an issue sheet that of the roughly 30-35 people in attendance for the open house, most supported keeping fluoride in the water. A primary concern raised: fluoride removal could disproportionately impact families with lower household incomes.
Wiedenfeld spoke to the Star-Observer via email on Thursday, saying that city staff will continue adding fluoride until directed otherwise by the council.
“Fluoride occurs naturally in groundwater, so if fluoride was no longer added, there would be some natural concentrations of fluoride in New Richmond’s drinking water but at a reduced level of 0.11mg/L[.]l,” Wiedenfeld said.
City staff listed four possible decisions in the issue sheet on the meeting’s agenda: keep the levels as is, remove fluoride, postpone discussion or leave the decision up to a referendum question on the ballot in April 2026
The Utility Commission, a city committee within the local government, voted unanimously Oct. 1 to remove fluoride and add a sequestering agent, sending the decision to the council for final approval, according to meeting minutes. The sequestering agent, a food-grade water treatment additive, binds to naturally occurring minerals like iron and manganese to stay dissolved in the water, preventing water discoloration and pipe buildup. If greenlighted, the agent will be added in April 2026.
Water Superintendent Dave Pufall said in the Utility Commission meeting in October that given the widespread availability of fluoride through modern dental products and treatments, there is growing consideration on if adding fluoride to the entire water supply is the most practical and beneficial approach, per the minutes.
New Richmond Utilities’ website states that water still has natural fluoride, with levels ranging “between 0.04 and 0.19 milligrams per liter, depending on the well source.” But those estimates fall considerably below .7 milligrams per liter, as recommended by the CDC, EPA and U.S. Public Health Service.
Hudson, River Falls, Ellsworth, Glenwood, Menomonie and Osceola currently add fluoride. Roberts, Amery, Star Prairie, Hammon, Baldwin, Somerset and Clear Lake do not.
“Removing fluoride could give residents the freedom to choose how to use fluoride, rather than it automatically being added to the water. There are also safety concerns as it relates to the storage of chemicals which are incompatible with fluoride; the city’s existing facilities are currently ‘grandfathered in’ but present a safety risk to system operators should chemicals mix, as the chemicals should instead be isolated in separate rooms. The topic first arose in conversation in June 2024, when the Utilities Commission and City Council began exploring the possibility of adding a sequestering agent to the municipal water supply to address high concentrations of iron and manganese, which can contribute to discolored water,” Wiedenfeld said.
The decision awaiting the council comes as federal government agencies have shifted in sentiment on fluoride in water since President Donald Trump’s reelection.
In November 2024, President Donald Trump nominated Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services. While he campaigned against Trump for president, Kennedy vowed to remove fluoride from water, according to the Washington Post. In April 2025, Kennedy, now the health secretary, said he planned to tell the CDC to stop recommending fluoridation in communities nationwide. At the time of publishing this story, the CDC still recommended fluoride in water as “an effective, cost-efficient method for preventing tooth decay and improving overall oral health.”
Since Kennedy has taken over as health secretary, he’s praised Utah’s decision to ban fluoride in water, per PBS. The EPA, which has been collaborating with Health and Human Services as part of the Make America Healthy Again agenda during Kennedy’s tenure, also announced it would “expeditiously review new scientific information” on the potential health risks of fluoride in water.
Original article online at: https://www.hudsonstarobserver.com/news/new-richmond-city-council-to-vote-on-fluoride-water-removal/article_4950974f-4f87-4de1-99c1-c6d02e4637e7.html
