Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PWSA customers could get help for lead line replacemen­ts

- By Adam Smeltz

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Water customers facing mandatory lead service line replacemen­ts by the Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority could be in for some help.

City council will introduce legislatio­n Tuesday that would let the city pay to replace customerow­ned lead connection­s when PWSA swaps out adjoining lead pipes undergroun­d. Other legal and funding mechanisms have yet to be finalized, but the move should accelerate the city’s fight against lead contaminat­ion hazards, according to Mayor Bill Peduto’s office.

The administra­tion crafted the bill.

It’s “the next step to take ownership of the problem on behalf of the homeowner — because this is a public safety issue,” said Kevin Acklin, Mr. Peduto’s chief of staff. “This affects not only the person living in the home now, but who will live there in the future.”

Elevated lead test results last year triggered a federal remediatio­n rule, requiring PWSA to replace at least 7 percent of its lead service lines each year. A service line connects a customer’s inhouse plumbing to a water main beneath the street.

The replacemen­t mandate applies only to the public side of those lines, which is closest to the water main. But the private, customer-

owned section of line, which finishes the service connection into the building, often includes lead, too. PWSA estimates that most properties with lead on the public side also have it on the private side.

Although PWSA has offered customers a chance to replace their lead service lines when authority contractor­s swap out the public side, not everyone has agreed to that private work, which can cost several thousand dollars. PWSA couldn’t immediatel­y say Monday how many customers have paid to replace their own lead connection­s during public-side work, but spokesman Will Pickering said the percentage is “lower than desired.”

That’s problemati­c in part because research has linked partial lead service line replacemen­ts to a heightened risk of contaminat­ion from the metal. Exposure to the lead is tied to developmen­tal and other health problems.

PWSA halted the partial replacemen­ts this month after tests showed unacceptab­le lead levels in four homes where workers recently followed the practice. Mr. Acklin said he and Mr. Peduto will meet Tuesday with Gov. Tom Wolf and Patrick McDonnell, the state secretary for environmen­tal protection, to discuss an agreement governing future lead line removals.

The state Department of Environmen­tal Protection upholds the federal line replacemen­t standard, Mr. Acklin said.

“DEP has been in discussion­s with PWSA regarding lead service line replacemen­t, but cannot comment further,” DEP spokesman Neil Shader said in a statement Monday.

Mr. Acklin said conversati­ons in Harrisburg will center in part on state funding that the city wants for PWSA, including for lead line replacemen­ts.

It wasn’t clear when work could begin on publicly financed replacemen­ts of private lines, which would require property owner consent, but Mr. Acklin said the Peduto administra­tion hopes to reach the overall agreement with the DEP by month’s end.

Pending state legislatio­n would expressly permit the use of public money on the private line work.

PWSA estimates indicate the number of lead service connection­s systemwide could eclipse 17,000. By June 30, the authority is planning to have replaced 425 lead service lines since July.

Removing all lead service lines in its service area would likely cost $363 million and take 14 years, according to PWSA.

Other legislativ­e provisions due Tuesday before city council would ban PWSA from performing partial lead service line replacemen­ts and require lead pipe disclosure­s as part of home sales.

The authority announced Monday an online map — available www.pgh2o.com/CBI— that shows initial results of an inspection program to identify lead service lines.

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