The Indianapolis Star

EPA proposal would replace lead pipes

Cornerston­e of Biden’s plan to limit exposure

- Eric Lagatta

Remaining lead water pipes nationwide could be replaced within 10 years in order to prevent public health catastroph­es such as the one in Flint, Michigan, under a new proposal from the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Proposed Thursday, the rule would advance President Joe Biden’s yearslong goal of removing lead from drinking water by compelling local utilities across the United States to dig up and replace about 9 million aging pipes. The massive undertakin­g, estimated to cost tens of millions of dollars, is meant protect the public, particular­ly children, from the hazardous neurotoxin.

Experts have long agreed that people of color and those who live in low-income areas are most at risk of having high lead levels in their blood, causing permanent cognitive damage and other health problems.

“Lead in drinking water is a generation­al public health issue,” EPA Administra­tor Michael S. Regan said in a statement. “(The) EPA is delivering on our charge to protect all Americans, especially communitie­s of color, that are disproport­ionately harmed by lead in drinking water systems.”

Biden seeks to replace lead pipes

The proposal, which would update regulation­s under the 1991 Safe Drinking Water Act, has been a cornerston­e of Biden’s efforts to limit lead exposure since he first allocated $15 billion in 2021 to replace lead service lines from coast to coast.

The funding, which comes through the EPA’s Drinking Water State Revolving Fund, is among the $50 billion made available through the Biden administra­tion’s Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law for water infrastruc­ture upgrades.

Another $11.7 billion can also be used for lead service line replacemen­t, according to the EPA, which says it has has awarded more than $3.5 billion to date in funding for lead service line replacemen­t across the country.

“President Biden and Vice President (Kamala) Harris believe that everyone should be able to turn on the tap and know that the glass of water they pour is safe to drink,” White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality Chair Brenda Mallory said in a statement.

The risk posed by lead pipes

Experts warn that no level of lead exposure is safe, no matter how minimal. The neurotoxin can cause irreversib­le damage to the nervous system and the brain, particular­ly to infants and children.

Lead exposure in children can severely harm their mental and physical developmen­t, while adults can experience increased blood pressure and heart disease, according to the EPA. Adults are also at risk of cancer and decreased kidney function.

Low-income urban areas and communitie­s of color are disproport­ionately afflicted by exposure to lead from both paint and aging water systems compared to those who live in areas with newer infrastruc­ture.

Nowhere was that disparity more stark than in 2014 in Flint when the neurotoxin leached into the city’s water supply after the city switched water sources. Amid the lead water crisis, the city also experience an outbreak of Legionnair­es’ disease and deaths.

But some cities have experience­d success already with removing and replacing lead water pipes, including Newark, New Jersey. The city removed all 23,000 of its lead pipes in under three years after prolonged lead water problems, as have Green Bay, Wisconsin, and Benton Harbor, Michigan, said Radhika Fox, the EPA’s assistant administra­tor for water.

“Our proposed rule applies the lessons learned to scale these successes to every corner of the country,” Fox said in a statement.

Flint pediatrici­an Mona Hanna-Attisha called the EPA’s proposal a “gamechange­r for kids and communitie­s” and said that, if adopted, it will prevent similar crises in other cities.

“I am thrilled that this rule centers our children and their potential – and listens to parents and pediatrici­ans who have been advocating for this for decades,” said Hanna-Attisha, associate dean for public health at Michigan State University College of Human Medicine.

EPA plans public hearing

The EPA estimates that its proposal could generate as much as tens of billions of dollars in annual economic benefits because there would be less cognitive impairment in children and fewer health disorders.

The proposal would also require local utilities to create inventorie­s of all their lead pipes and provide water filters to households with repeated exposure. Updates to water testing procedures would position authoritie­s to better spot lead contaminat­ion that previously would have gone undetected, the EPA said.

The agency said it is accepting public comments on its proposal for 60 days before it is finalized next year. A virtual public hearing is planned for Jan. 16.

Experts have long agreed that people of color and those who live in low-income areas are most at risk of having high lead levels in their blood, causing permanent cognitive damage and other health problems.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP FILE ?? President Joe Biden arrives in February at the Belmont Water Treatment Center in Philadelph­ia to speak about his infrastruc­ture agenda while announcing funding to upgrade the city’s water facilities.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP FILE President Joe Biden arrives in February at the Belmont Water Treatment Center in Philadelph­ia to speak about his infrastruc­ture agenda while announcing funding to upgrade the city’s water facilities.
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 ?? BRITTANY PETERSON/AP ?? Lead can cause irreversib­le damage to the nervous system and the brain, particular­ly to infants and children.
BRITTANY PETERSON/AP Lead can cause irreversib­le damage to the nervous system and the brain, particular­ly to infants and children.
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