Mr Dolan said intervention was needed if high TCE levels were found.
"It's a very challenging thing for people. We're knocking on their door and saying, 'We've found a chemical. We think there might be a chemical near or in your house. It's a chemical you don't want there.'
"As you'd appreciate that's a very difficult conversation to have."
It was a difficult conversation the SA EPA had with Deanne Backshall three months ago.
She lives in the Adelaide suburb of Thebarton and was told high levels of TCE vapours were coming up through her floors.
"Mine were in the 30s, I think. That's 30 parts per million, which doesn't actually sound like that much, but apparently it is a level that's injurious to your health," she said.
Ms Backshall has temporarily moved out while a fan system is installed in her home to disperse the TCE vapours.
The fan system costs South Australian taxpayers about $20,000 to $30,000 per house.
Cate Moore lives in another Adelaide suburb, Beverley, and has already had the system put in.
"We were very concerned, definitely, because at the time our son was still quite a young baby," Ms Moore said.
"We've been back in the house for 12 months [since the fan system was installed] and the EPA has done about five different tests to check the levels of TCE in the house, and we feel absolutely safe."
TCE has been a big problem in the United States, where the US EPA has proposed a ban.
During the 1970s in Massachusetts, a town's water supply was contaminated and children became sick.
The scandal and subsequent lawsuit was turned into a Hollywood movie, A Civil Action, starring John Travolta.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-01-31/chemical-tce-found-to-have-caused-parkinsons-in-veteran/9377884
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