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A decade into the work, Chicago is finally taking out toxic lead pipes when it


Chicago spent the past decade tearing up streets to replace aging, sometimes leaky water mains, borrowing more than $400 million and doubling the cost of water to pay for the work.

On every one of the 792 miles dug up, crews hired by the Department of Water Management connected new cast-iron water mains to old lead pipes known as service lines that bring water into single-family homes and two-flats.

The department continued this routine even after a 2013 federal study of Chicago homes found it can expose people to alarming concentrations of lead, a brain-damaging metal with no safe level of exposure.

Now, with fewer than 90 miles of water mains still to be replaced, state law is forcing city workers and contractors for the first time to pull out toxic pipes at the same time.

Contractors prepare to dig and locate lead pipes for removal, in the 3100 block of South Ridgeway Avenue in Chicago on April 10, 2023.

Starting last week on the 3100 block of South Ridgeway Avenue in Little Village, crews are going house by house reconnecting Chicagoans to the municipal water system with safer copper pipes.

The project marks the beginning of a more concerted effort to rid the nation’s third largest city of roughly 400,000 lead service lines, which Chicago required by law until the end of 1986, decades after most other cities banned use of the toxic metal to convey drinking water.

“We are happy they are finally beginning to address this problem, though it’s taken them far too long,” said Kim Wasserman, executive director of the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization.

Four years ago, Mayor Lori Lightfoot promised during her first campaign to begin addressing a health threat her predecessors insisted didn’t exist. By the end of March only 451 lead service lines had been replaced in low-income households that qualified for a share of federal grant money.

Another 306 were replaced during responses to leaky pipes and 110 were paid for by individual property owners, according to water department records.

For a number of reasons, the pace of replacements is about to speed up not only in Chicago but statewide.

Gambino Perez watches from his porch as workers prepare to work on lead service replacement in the 3100 block of South Lawndale Avenue on April 10, 2023.

A 2021 state law requires small Illinois water utilities to replace all lead service lines within 15 years. Larger systems get up to 34 years to complete the work. Another provision of the law demands that service lines must be replaced whenever a new water main is installed.

Lightfoot’s lobbyists in Springfield blocked the law from passing until state legislators agreed to give Chicago up to 50 years to finish the job. At the mayor’s behest, lawmakers also exempted the city from the water main provision until January.

Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson pledged during his campaign to make lead service line replacements a priority. In March, he noted on Twitter that the majority of childhood lead poisoning cases in the city are in predominantly Black and Latino neighborhoods. “That ends with a Johnson administration — because water is life,” he wrote.

More money to pay for the work is on the way. Chicago is bound to get a cut of the $3 billion Congress set aside last year for lead service line replacements — fulfilling a campaign promise by President Joe Biden. The city also is borrowing another $336 million through a low-interest federal loan program for water projects.

“Chicago’s own monitoring shows the city has a big problem with lead in water,” said Erik Olson, a senior strategist at the nonprofit Natural Resources Defense Council who for decades has clamored for a more aggressive response from federal, state and local governments. “What you need is somebody who actually wants to fix it, who steps up to the plate and asks ‘What are the impediments and how do we get rid of them.’ ”

Newark, New Jersey, highlights what can happen when city leaders stop denying they have lead-in-water problems and get to work eliminating them.

After he was criticized for his initial response to testing that found high lead levels in Newark schools and homes, Mayor Ras Baraka persuaded New Jersey lawmakers to clear the way for local ordinances that eliminated the need for a property owner’s permission to replace a lead service line — a critical change that helped get the lead out in rental properties.

City officials declared a health emergency and agreed to pay to replace about 23,000 lead service lines rather than requiring property owners to contribute or making them fill…



Read More: A decade into the work, Chicago is finally taking out toxic lead pipes when it

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