Pubdate: Sun, 24 Jul 2016 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2016 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Yesenia Robles STATE LAB TESTING SHOWS NO THC IN HUGO WATER Advisory Ends After Residents Were Told Not to Bathe, Drink or Cook With Their Tap Water Hugo - the small town that made a sudden appearance in national headlines for nearly two days - is returning to normal after state laboratories determined that all six field tests that gave rise to suspicions about THC-contaminated water turned out to be false positives. Sandie Bailey and her 10-year-old daughter, JoHanna, said Friday that dishes were starting to pile up in their kitchen in Hugo because they were scared to use the town's water. The water was feared to be contaminated by THC, the main psychoactive compound in marijuana. Testing by the CBI, announced Saturday, eliminated that fear. Photos by RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post The Colorado Bureau of Investigation provided the more conclusive results indicating the water does not contain any THC, the main psychoactive compound in marijuana. The Lincoln County Sheriff's Office announced the news Saturday at about 8 a.m., calling off a water advisory that had warned residents not to bathe, drink or cook with their tap water. The suspicion that THC was in Hugo's water was first announced Thursday after county officials, using field-test kits, got some positive tests results. Despite the brief confusion it caused - including the football team canceling practice and local restaurants having to shut down - sheriff's officials said Saturday they don't regret taking the field-test kit results seriously. "If this situation were to ever happen again, we would act in the same way," said Capt. Michael Yowell, a spokesman for the sheriff's office. "Public drinking water is nothing to chance or ignore." Some were skeptical from the beginning. Marijuana experts and lab workers noted that THC is not water soluble. Yowell said Saturday the field-test kits used were saliva-based OrAlert test kits. The maker of the kit was not immediately available Saturday. Susan Medina, a spokeswoman for the CBI, said the state agency did not keep track of data on the effectiveness of the field tests and how those results compared with the lab tests. Medina did say toxicology tests conducted at the agency's laboratory "are much more sensitive in nature compared to field tests, and offer more in-depth analysis of the sample." Yowell said Hugo's scare made officials recognize there are no good tests to detect THC in water. "I don't think anyone other than a chemist or forensic expert could say why the field tests were inaccurate, a question we are asking too," Yowell said. "To our knowledge there is no precedent that was set for a situation like this." Hugo resident Keith Bowhan said Saturday he appreciated the work that local officials had done. "I think they did everything they could to get the situation with the water under control," Bowhan said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom