Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Chicago to test tap water for lead

Focus is on homes of poisoned children

- By MICHAEL HAWTHORNE

Chicago — With public officials across the nation under fire for downplayin­g the health risks posed by lead water pipes, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administra­tion is moving to start testing tap water in the homes of children poisoned by the brain-damaging metal.

A top official at the Chicago Department of Public Health revealed the new program Monday during a presentati­on to lawyers, physicians, researcher­s and advocates debating how to address the city’s lingering problems with lead poisoning, which continues to ravage children in poor, predominan­tly African-American neighborho­ods on the south and west sides at rates significan­tly higher than the national average.

Details of the water-testing program are still being worked out. But in both tone and substance, the policy change marks an abrupt shift by city officials who for years have insisted Chicagoans face little, if any, risk from drinking water distribute­d to thousands of homes through lead pipes.

“We recognize the water in Chicago is generally safe, but to reassure people I think drawing more samples would be very helpful,” Cort Lohff, the health department’s director of environmen­tal health, said in a brief interview after the meeting organized by the Loyola University Center for the Human Rights of Children. “If we find elevated levels, we can work with the water department to mitigate the problem.”

Exposure to even small amounts of lead causes subtle brain damage that can trigger learning disabiliti­es and violent behavior later in life. The need for new solutions is particular­ly acute in Chicago, where a Chicago Tribune investigat­ion found hot spots of lead poisoning in some of the city’s poorest, most crime-ridden neighborho­ods.

The Tribune reported in February that health department inspectors do not test tap water for lead when investigat­ing the homes of poisoned children, even though the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency says water can contribute up to 60% of an infant’s exposure during a critical period of brain developmen­t.

Unlike most other major U.S. cities, Chicago required the use of lead pipes until the federal government banned them nationwide in the mid-1980s. Lead service lines connect nearly 80% of the city’s properties to street mains, according to the Chicago Department of Water Management.

Most of the lead that harms children today comes from flaking paint in homes built before 1978 — a major problem in cities with older housing in various states of disrepair. But water could be a factor in cases where there are no signs of lead-based paint in the home — about 20% of the lead-poisoning cases in Chicago each year, Lohff said.

The health department’s plan drew praise from Marc Edwards, a Virginia Tech researcher and MacArthur Foundation “genius grant” recipient who has been sharply critical of the way Chicago has managed and monitored its public water supply.

Edwards, who last year played a major role in exposing lead hazards in the Flint, Mich., water system, said Chicago officials in 2009 rejected his offer to conduct the same type of testing that the Emanuel administra­tion is moving to begin now.

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