The term “lead pipe cinch” means something that is very easy or certain. Here’s two things that are lead pipe cinches: first, that ingesting lead, such as from the water or the air, is bad for us. It’s especially bad for children, whose cognitive abilities can be impaired. Second, that the Biden Administration’s latest proposal to reduce the lead in our drinking water is not going to accomplish that.
Is it safe? Credit: Bing Image Creator
The new proposed rules would require that lead service
lines be replaced within ten years; there are estimated to still be some 9.2
million such lines in the U.S. The trouble is, no one really knows how many
there are or where exactly they are, making replacement difficult. So step two
of the rules is for an initial inventory by next October. The “acceptable”
parts per billion would drop from 15 to 10. Utilities would also have to
improve tap sampling and consumer outreach.
“This is the strongest
lead rule that the nation has ever seen,” Radhika Fox, the E.P.A.’s assistant
administrator for water, told
The New York Times. “This is historic progress.”
Erik Olson, an expert with the Natural Resources
Defense Council is also hopeful, telling
NPR: "We now know that having literally tens of millions of people
being exposed to low levels of lead from things like their drinking water has a
big impact on the population. We're hoping this new rule will have a big
impact."
The EPA estimates the replacement will cost $20b to
$30b over the next decade; the 2021 Infrastructure Act allocated $15b, along
with 11.7b available from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund. Of course,
the cost will be much higher.
Chicago alone claims
it will cost $10b to replace its estimated 400,000 lead pipes. The Wall
Street Journal reports:
“David LaFrance, CEO of the American Water Works Association, a trade
group, said the total cost could “easily exceed” $90 billion. He said the
average cost to replace a single lead service line is more than $10,000, nearly
double the EPA’s estimate.”
Digging up all those lead pipes won't be easy. Or cheap. Credit: Bing Image Creator |
It’s not like any of this is catching us by surprise.
You probably remember the 2014 scandal with the Flint
(MI) water crisis, with all those people lining up for bottled water. You
may not remember similar
crises in Washington D.C., Newark (NJ), or Benton Harbor (MI). “The
Washington, D.C., lead-in-water crisis was far more severe than Flint in every
respect,” Yanna Lambrinidou, a medical anthropologist at Virginia Tech and
co-founder of the Campaign for Lead Free Water, told
AP.
The EPA issued a set of rules around lead pipes in 1991,
but those rules were watered down, and little progress has been made since. Ronnie
Levin, an EPA researcher at the times, also told AP: “But, you know, we’ve been
diddling around for 30 years.”
Because, you know, that’s what we do, especially when
fixing a problem costs too much money.
The water companies may replace their water lines but
not the ones that go under private property, and the pipes inside homes or
offices -- well, you should start thinking about a water filter (ones certified
for lead, of course).
You wouldn’t buy a house that you knew had lead paint
or had asbestos, but most people don’t know if any part of their water supply
comes through lead pipes. Dr. Lambrinidou told
Fast Company: “We know that the majority of homes, if not all, have
lead-bearing plumbing. And we know from the science that as long as you have
lead-bearing plumbing, you are at risk of exposure.”
It shouldn’t be a surprise that the problem is worst
in cities and in older housing stock. “This a public health concern that has,
unfortunately, spanned generations and an issue that has disproportionately
impacted low-income and minority communities,” EPA Administrator Michael Regan
said at the EPA briefing. “Everyone in this country should be able to turn on
their tap for a glass of water and know that it’s safe to drink.”
"We're trying to right a longstanding wrong
here," Radhika Fox, head of the EPA Office of Water, echoed. "We're
bending the arc towards equity and justice on this legacy issue."
Experts estimate some 500,000 children have high
levels of lead in their blood; that number may be overstated, or wildly low.
Adults are at risk as well, especially pregnant women. The EPA believes its
rules would generate between $9.8b and 34.8b in economic benefits each year, making
it a good return on the replacement investments. But the rub is that those economic
benefits are from less cognitive impairments and health disorders, in
populations we tend to neglect anyway, and so are much “softer” than the direct
budget hits of replacing the pipes.
“We have failed
generations of children by not eliminating lead,” Mona Hanna-Attisha, the
Michigan pediatrician whose research helped to exposed the 2014 Flint water
crisis, told
NYT. True, but we’ve been failing generations of kids for
generations in many ways, such as child
poverty or infant
mortality. We have generations of “lost
Einsteins," kids who never had a chance to reach their full potential due
to their surroundings while growing up, whether from lead in their water, insufficient
food, polluted
air, or failing
public education.
We’re the champs at
failing kids. And at addressing structural issues like infrastructure.
The new rules now have
a waiting period, and final rules aren’t expected until next fall. Then there
will be a waiting period before they go into effect. By the time the lobbyists
and the politicians – we can’t afford it! – have their say, I’m not optimistic
how much impact the final rules will have.
I’m freaked out that
there might be lead in my water lines. I’m saddened that there are perhaps
hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of children who will never reach their
full potential due to having adsorbed too much lead. And I’m furious that we
allow our public goods, like clean water or air, to be compromised by politicians
whose only concern is reelection.
We can do better,
Sadly, it’s a lead pipe cinch that we probably won’t.
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