Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

GOP opposed pipe replacemen­t funds

- D.L. Davis

Has Milwaukee’s position as Wisconsin’s largest city as well as a Democratic stronghold put Brewtown in the crosshairs of state Republican­s?

State Sen. Chris Larson, D-Milwaukee, alluded to the city’s treatment by Republican­s about a week before the election, in an Oct. 26 tweet marking National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week:

“I’m so glad we have a Governor who cares and wants to help WI cities get to 0% lead piping. Sadly, in 2019, Republican­s stripped $40 million from the budget for lead pipe replacemen­t — because they thought it helped MKE too much.”

That caught our attention.

Did Republican lawmakers strip funding from the budget for lead pipe replacemen­t because it would help Milwaukee too much?

Evers’ proposal

Under Evers’ plan, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, state officials would have borrowed nearly $40 million over the two-year budget period to create a forgivable loan program for local government­s to help pay for lead pipe replacemen­ts. The borrowing also would have created a separate grant program that would allow farmers to build infrastruc­ture aimed at reducing pollution and help rid contaminan­ts in the Milwaukee River and St. Louis River, which is in northwest Wisconsin.

Evers’ proposal would have paid for up to 50% of the cost of replacing a lead water service line in Milwaukee, if the city qualified for the state program.

According to Milwaukee Water Works, there is no lead in the city’s drinking water when it leaves treatment plants.

But there is a danger in the water — especially in older homes — because old service lines, which run to individual houses, and interior plumbing may contain lead, which can leach into the water. The most fundamenta­l solution, in Milwaukee and elsewhere, is to replace the old pipes with copper ones, but other interim steps can make a difference, such as assuring at-risk homes have filters on their taps.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, even low levels of lead in blood have been shown to cause developmen­tal delays and learning difficulties in children. Lead exposure also harms adults, who may suffer high blood pressure, joint pain, headaches and an increased risk of having a miscarriag­e or premature birth.

As of Dec. 31, 2019, the Milwaukee Water Works reported 74,416 lead service lines within its service area, according to Department of Public Works spokesman Brian DeNeve. About 70,000 of those are residentia­l.

Those 70,000 residentia­l lead service lines account for about 40% of the total statewide.

The proposed $40 million in bonding could have led to the replacemen­t of 9% of the state’s 170,000 lead service lines still in use, the Evers administra­tion estimated.

GOP response

When asked to provide backup for Larson’s statement, spokesman Justin Bielinski pointed to news articles detailing GOP objections in the wake of the Evers proposal.

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, RRochester, said the plan was too expensive.

“I feel like the simple answer was to just say we’re going to have government pay for all these lead lateral replacemen­ts,” Vos said, according to an April 10, 2019, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article. “But the number nationwide is trillions of dollars, which we will never have the ability — at least in Wisconsin — to be able to do things like that everywhere across the state.”

In the same article, state Rep. John Nygren, R-Marinette, who co-chairs the Legislatur­e’s budget-writing committee, singled out the Milwaukee funding.

“My understand­ing is that the proposal — a vast majority of it — is going to Milwaukee,” Nygren said. “We had targeted our response to the lead issue as a local opportunit­y for communitie­s to get involved and provide assistance at the local level, rather than people from Marinette funding lead replacemen­ts in Milwaukee. I’m not sure that that’s necessaril­y fair from a taxpayer standpoint.”

Meanwhile, a video titled “Milwaukee Tries to Pass the Buck on Lead Lateral Replacemen­t” posted May 20, 2019, by the MacIver Institute to YouTube, shows Vos praising Madison’s efforts to replace lead laterals on its own, without a state mandate, and notes the laterals are owned by homeowners, not taxpayers.

“The City of Madison did a great job over the past dozen years getting rid of lead laterals on their own without a mandate from the state,” Vos said.

In the video, Vos says those who have already paid to upgrade their laterals should not have to now pay the cost of replacing laterals owned by others. In its descriptio­n of the video, the MacIver Institute, a conservati­ve think tank, describes this as a “handout” to the city from state taxpayers.

In May 2019, the Legislatur­e voted along party lines to remove many of Evers’ most significant proposals from his budget, including the lead proposal.

So, in short, before striking the money from the budget, several GOP leaders cited the fact too much of it would go to Milwaukee. But they also cited other factors, including questionin­g whether an effort financed by state taxpayers was an appropriat­e way to tackle the problem.

Our ruling

In a tweet, Larson said, “In 2019, Republican­s stripped $40 million from the budget for lead pipe replacemen­t — because they thought it helped MKE too much.”

At least two key leaders opposed the proposal, citing — in part — the amount of money that would go to the City of Milwaukee. But there were other factors cited as well.

Our definition for Mostly True is: “The statement is accurate but needs clarification or additional informatio­n.”

That fits here.

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