Exciting day! Please join us at 2 PM ET today for a partner call to go through the new rule (email me if you want the invite to join).
November 30, 2023
Share this page
Margie Kelly
Senior Strategic Communications Manager
WASHINGTON – A new rule proposed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
today sets the stage for every lead water pipe in the nation to be replaced, with the vast majority expected to be removed in the next ten years. The Lead and Copper Rule Improvements will effectively end the practice of supplying drinking water to homes through
toxic lead pipes that have threatened the health and well-being of families in all 50 states for more than a century. It is well-established by medical experts that there is no safe level of lead exposure.
“In a moment when many of us feel overwhelmed by bad news, the EPA’s lead rule provides
a ray of hope that we are approaching the day when every family can trust that the water from their kitchen tap is safe, regardless of how much money they have or their zip code. The EPA is doing what Congress charged it to do decades ago: getting the lead
out of drinking water. Communities demanding safe water got the attention of President Biden, whose administration will finally remove every lead pipe from the ground,” said Erik
D. Olson, senior strategic director for health at NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council). “But without mandatory requirements for water systems to pay the
full cost of removing all lead pipes, history shows us that many water utilities will not take the actions needed to reduce lead levels for every household.”
The EPA’s revised Lead and Copper Rule represents a key moment for the Biden Administration,
which made eliminating lead pipes and delivering safe water a centerpiece of the President’s policy agenda with bipartisan support. Lead-contaminated drinking water has disproportionately burdened low-income communities of color like Flint, Michigan, and Newark,
New Jersey, whose water crises made it impossible to ignore the reality of unequal access to safe water. Millions of people are at risk of harmful exposure to lead in water simply from living in one of the more than 9 million homes across the country served
by a lead water pipe.
Removing lead pipes in the next ten years is a key requirement in the EPA proposal
to improve water safety under the Lead and Copper Rule. While the proposed rule text has not been released yet, based upon our best understanding of what EPA is proposing, crucial improvements in the Rule include:
In addition, while the proposed rule’s text is not yet available, the proposal is
not without its flaws, which could threaten to delay access to safe water. Apparent weaknesses of the proposal include:
The
History of EPA’s Rules for Lead in Tap Water
The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), originally enacted nearly a half century ago
in 1974, required EPA to set “interim” drinking water standards. In 1975, EPA set a 50 ppb interim Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) for lead. Frustrated by EPA’s slow action, Congress amended the law in 1986 to require additional standards and told EPA to regularly
review the adequacy of health protection provided by its decade-old “interim” standards and to strengthen them if feasible. The 1986 law also prohibited the new installation or sale of lead pipes for use in drinking water. In response, EPA issued the now-infamous
“Lead and Copper Rule” (LCR) in 1991. The LCR was supposed to reduce the levels of lead in tap water in part by requiring the removal of lead service lines when 10 percent of tested taps in a water system exceeded the “lead action level” of 15 ppb.
It became clear that the LCR was failing to protect the public from lead after numerous
lead crises, such as in Washington DC in the early 2000’s and later in Flint and Newark. In 2016, Congress revised the SDWA, this time adding a grant program for replacement of lead service lines, especially targeting disadvantaged households. Seeing that
this was insufficient, Congress again amended the law in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law in 2019 to strengthen the lead service line replacement grant program and provide an unprecedented $15 billion exclusively for replacement of these lead pipes. Thus,
Congress has repeatedly sought to push EPA to strengthen its protections of the public from lead in tap water, and specifically from lead pipes, with only modest success due to the woefully inadequate LCR.
On January 15, 2021, in one of its last official actions, the Trump administration
issued what NRDC called a “weak and illegal” revision to the LCR that would allow continued widespread lead contamination of tap water. EPA asserted at the time that the rule would modestly increase lead service line replacements. NRDC, the NAACP and frontline
community groups represented by Earthjustice, and 10 states challenged the Trump administration rule as inadequate and unlawful. Ultimately
EPA decided in December 2022 to no longer defend the Trump administration rule in court and promised a strengthened LCR by October
2024.
Additional Resources
What to Look for in the New Lead and Copper Rule (Erik D. Olson blog, November 2023)
Lead on Tap: A Short History of the Failure to Fix One of America’s Worst Water Contamination Crises (Erik D.
Olson blog, November 2023)
“Staggering” Health Benefits From Replacing Lead Water Pipes Could Save Nearly $1 Trillion from Avoided Health Impacts (Report,
October 2023)
EPA’s Chance Is NOW to Finally Fix the Broken Lead & Copper Rule (Erik D. Olson blog, February 2023)
Kayla Calkin
Federal Campaigns Director
Natural Resources Defense Council &
NRDC Action Fund
1152 15TH STREET NW, SUITE 300
WASHINGTON, DC 20005
M:202.680.8417
KCALKIN@NRDC.ORG
SHE/HER Pronouns
NRDCACTIONFUND.org
Please save paper. Think before printing.
This message is intended only for the addressee and may contain information privileged, confidential and exempt from disclosure under law.
If you are not the intended recipient, please notify me immediately by email and delete the original message. Thank you.