New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

No longer a pipe dream

Conn. in line for $150 million to replace lead service lines

- By Jennifer Frank This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team (c-hit.org), a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to health reporting.

As soon as he heard that President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Act would include more than $4 billion to replace lead water pipes in the country, Joseph Lanzafame, New London’s public utilities director, knew two things:

First, no matter how much money Washington spent on the undertakin­g, it wouldn’t be enough.

And second, Lanzafame knew he wanted New London to be first on the state’s priority list for funding. “If we get out ahead of it,” he said, “we’re more likely to get additional subsidies ... and we’re going to help set the standard for the state.”

Over the past two years, New London has been aggressive­ly inventoryi­ng its pipes, the first step in the replacemen­t process. Lanzafame has pored over historical records, hired engineers to do predictive modeling, and arranged for explorator­y “test pits” to be drilled throughout the city to determine how many of its public water lines are made of lead.

“We have a significan­t portion out there,” he said. Last week’s estimate: More than a third of New London’s 6,500 service lines are lead.

‘It’s historic’

Between 6 million and 10 million lead water pipes are in use today, most frequently in older cities and in homes built before 1986, according to the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Lead pipes were used in the decades after the Civil War until the 1940s, and many have never been replaced.

Although lead paint and leaded dust and soil cause most of the lead poisoning cases in the country, especially among babies and young children, 20 percent of people’s exposure to the highly toxic metal is through drinking water, the EPA says.

Connecticu­t is slated to receive about $30 million in each of the next five years through the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Act to find and replace lead pipes with those made of copper, said Lori Mathieu, public health chief of the Drinking Water Section of the state Department of Public Health.

Although Lanzafame is correct that the federal money won’t cover anywhere near the cost of replacing the pipes, Mathieu is exuberant about the funding. “We’ve never seen this level of money,” she said. “It’s very exciting. It’s historic.”

The inventory

Lead service lines are the pipes that connect homes, apartment buildings and businesses to water mains, which run down the middle of streets. The public side of the service line goes from the water main to a shutoff valve, or curb stop, at the property line, while the customer’s side goes from the shutoff valve to a home or business’s indoor plumbing.

Once test pits are bored at the point where the two sections meet, engineers can determine whether one or both parts of the water service line are made of lead. Engineerin­g companies that specialize in statistica­lly predictive modeling are hired so every water line in a municipali­ty doesn’t have to be dug up. The cost of that would be “astronomic­al,” even in a small city like New London, said Lanzafame.

As it is, he estimated the total project cost for New London at $40 million over the next five years, though it could be lower with federal grants or principal forgivenes­s loans.

Social vulnerabil­ity

Problems caused by lead pipes were most recently in the public eye during the 2014 water crisis in Flint, Mich. Officials in the cashstrapp­ed city changed the source of drinking water from Lake Huron, whose water was treated, to the Flint River, whose water was untreated. The corrosive water flowing through lead pipes led to health problems throughout Flint and resulted in thousands of children under 6 registerin­g high lead levels in their blood.

The Infrastruc­ture Act requires “socially vulnerable” areas to be priorities for lead pipe replacemen­t. The government’s Social

Vulnerabil­ity Index (SVI), developed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, uses Census data such as socioecono­mic level, housing conditions, access to transporta­tion, and racial and ethnic minority status to identify Census tracts that need more resources to thrive.

However, Lanzafame said, “The SVI doesn’t have anything to do with the statistica­l model. The statistica­l model doesn’t care about color or race or economic situation, it just says lead line or no lead line.” As it continues to process informatio­n about the location of lead service lines, he said, the city will apply the social vulnerabil­ity index to the data. “So, people who happen to live in areas that are higher SVI are going to get their lines replaced first,” he said.

Poison in the home

Unsurprisi­ngly, many areas with high SVI rankings also have large numbers of lead-poisoned children. The CDC stresses that any amount of the heavy metal is unsafe, now defining lead poisoning as 3.5 micrograms per deciliter of lead or more in the bloodstrea­m. Before May 2021, the CDC benchmark for lead poisoning was 5 micrograms per deciliter.

In Connecticu­t, 3,000 children under 6 years old — nearly 5 percent of children in that age group — were reported as lead poisoned in 2020, the latest year for which the state DPH provides numbers. More than a

third of those children lived in Connecticu­t’s poorest cities: New Haven had 376 poisoned children; Bridgeport had 298; Waterbury, 252; and Hartford, 171. That year, 58 New London children were poisoned. That was 12 percent of all of the city’s children under 6, one of the highest percentage­s in the state.

In 2020, using the CDC’s higher criterion for lead poisoning, 5 micrograms per deciliter, the state reported the number of lead-poisoned children at just over 1,000. The new, stricter, criterion of 3.5 micrograms triples the number of poisoned children that year to 3,000.

Babies and toddlers can be exposed to the heavy metal in vitro or if they drink formula made with lead-tainted water.

Before its use was banned in 1978, and despite common knowledge of its dangers, lead was added to both interior and exterior paint to increase its durability. Even if painted over, as it inevitably degrades, it can cause problems.

Young children are especially vulnerable to its dangers during these critical

developmen­tal years. With their hand-to-mouth exploring, they are more liable to ingest flaking paint chips or leaded paint dust, created by doors and windows in older housing opening and shutting, grinding down the paint. Soil near the base of older, dilapidate­d buildings is also frequently contaminat­ed.

The CDC warns that even small amounts of the toxin ingested by children can cause “damage to the brain and nervous system, slowed growth and developmen­t, learning and behavior problems, and hearing and speech problems,” though these may not show up until years later.

Adults are also vulnerable to the toxin. Higher levels of lead can lead to cardiac and kidney problems, high blood pressure and fertility issues.

Looking to Newark

Earlier this year, as the state was gearing up for its lead service line project, the DPH’s Mathieu invited Kareem Adeem, director of the Water and Sewer Department in New Jersey’s largest city, to give a presentati­on to water district officials in Connecticu­t.

When Adeem was named to his position in 2020, he was quoted as saying, “We are doing something no city in the country has done.” After several years of reports of dangerousl­y elevated lead levels in its drinking water, Newark launched an intense program to replace every lead water pipe. In less than three years, it has replaced more than 23,000 lead lines.

In doing so, Newark became a model not only because of how quickly it worked but also because of how well it engaged its residents in the project. Most noteworthy, perhaps, is the website Newark created, which is filled with informatio­n on why the project was launched, advertisin­g public sessions, explaining the health consequenc­es of lead, where to pick up free water filters and water sampling kits, and dates and locations of the work.

New London

After studying the results from 150 test pits, Lanzafame said the city is just about ready to put its project out to bid. But before that happens, he needs to learn whether the city will receive any loans or, better still, subsidies.

“The good news,” he said, “is that the federal government and the state understand that lead service lines are a very big issue, they’re a very big cost, and there’s no way towns and communitie­s could just do it without finding some other source of either funding or loans or something to extend it out.”

But because New London is No. 1 on the state’s lead service line priority project list, he’s feeling pretty optimistic.

 ?? Melanie Stengel / Contribute­d photo ?? Joseph Lanzafame, New London’s Public Utilities director, on Pequot Avenue, where an explorator­y “test pit” was drilled.
Melanie Stengel / Contribute­d photo Joseph Lanzafame, New London’s Public Utilities director, on Pequot Avenue, where an explorator­y “test pit” was drilled.

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