President Joe Biden announced Thursday $3 billion toward identifying and replacing the nation’s unsafe lead pipes, a long-sought move to improve public health and clean drinking water that will be paid for by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

Biden unveiled the new funding in North Carolina, a battleground state Democrats have lost to Donald Trump in the past two presidential elections but are feeling more bullish toward due to an abortion measure on the state’s ballot this November.

The Environmental Protection Agency will invest $3 billion in the lead pipe effort annually through 2026, Administrator Michael Regan told reporters. He said that nearly 50% of the funding will go to disadvantaged communities – and a fact sheet from the Biden administration noted that “lead exposure disproportionately affects communities of color and low-income families.”

  • frezik@midwest.social
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    7 months ago

    My city got rid of lead pipes decades ago, and now I’m mad other cities are getting free money to replace them.

    (This post is about student loans)

    • BlanketsWithSmallpox@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I hate scientists because they figured out the cure for cancer before my meemaw died. All my homies hate scientists. It probably makes you gay anyway.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    This is huge…

    I don’t get a chance to be happy with Biden often, but this is one of the rare times.

    Lead poisoning doesn’t just hurt people’s health, it makes the stupid and belligerent. Like, those are the actual effects of it.

    There’s a reason the benefits of banning leaded gas takes decades, it’s not helping those who already have lead poisoning, it’s just waiting for a new generation to grow up without it.

    This is like one of those “best time to plant a tree” things.

    The benefits are really far away, but doing it is a huge investment in our future as a society.

    It’s reassuring to know society overall will be more sane when I’m old.

    • The Uncanny Observer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 months ago

      Sadly, this is barely enough to scratch the surface. We need a lot more money put into this, and it’s not like the presidents before Biden didn’t know about it. They just didn’t even do this much. It’s disgraceful.

      • Serinus@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Kind of true, but some lead pipes just aren’t an immediate issue. Like asbestos in a building that isn’t disturbed, it doesn’t hurt anyone until it starts to come loose.

        Getting the worst of it solved is a good step.

        • The Uncanny Observer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          The issue with not dealing with problems immediately, is that people have a tendency to push them down the line over and over until it’s not just immediate, it’s an emergency over a decade ago. Flint still doesn’t have clean water. This should have been a good first step Obama did, like he promised he was going to.

          • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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            7 months ago

            Flint actually does have clean water by most metrics and independent measurements, but public trust is reasonably deeply, deeply shaken.

            This, and I don’t mean this as a bad thing, isn’t actually a thing Biden started. It’s a massive disbursal of funds allocated by the infrastructure bill to a program started in 1996 for upgrading water infrastructure and specifically removing lead pipes.

            So this is something great to do, and we should keep doing more of it (there’s $12 billion more waiting for future rounds), and we can be slightly happy that we’re not complete fuck ups since we actually started nearly 30 years ago.

            We shouldn’t have to live in a world where we need to advertise that the people entrusted to be basically competent at managing our public works are doing their jobs, but here we are, and we should probably advertise this stuff better.

      • BakerBagel@midwest.social
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        7 months ago

        It’s in conjunction with state and local funding as well. Your local municipality might be abke to aquire $4 million to replace the main lines through local bonds, while getting $2 million from the state and another $10 million from this federal program.

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            Biden: Adds on to the amount he’s already given to replace lead pipes; more than any other president has done

            The Uncanny Observer: Yeah but it should have been done 20 years ago so I’m mad 😠

            Edit: this brings the total up to 9 billion. Still not enough for everything, but how much has every other president gave? Be a little happy

            • The Uncanny Observer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              You’re right. I need to really celebrate those incremental improvements. I mean, not like we’re gonna get anything more out of democrats. Just whatever they need to still be able to say “we’re not as bad as the other dude”.

              • maniclucky@lemmy.world
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                Unironically, yes. Big jumps don’t happen without violent revolution and that rarely works out well. Progress happens by baby steps. If you’re waiting for everything to get better all at once, you will be angry the rest of your life.

                • beardown@lemm.ee
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                  Big jumps don’t happen without violent revolution and that rarely works out well.

                  Explain to me how the United States was created

                  George Washington did not politely ask for independence.

                  He and others murdered people for it. A lot of people. And then he won. And now here we all are.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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      7 months ago

      Lead poisoning doesn’t just hurt people’s health, it makes the stupid and belligerent. Like, those are the actual effects of it.

      Dosage matters.

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        It takes a very low dosage to see effects, and it stacks.

        So, you’re right. But it just feels like you were trying to disagree with me, when you were reinforcing my point that even a little is harmful.

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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          But it just feels like you were trying to disagree with me, when you were reinforcing my point that even a little is harmful.

          Again this arrogant stupidity.

          It takes a very low dosage to see effects, and it stacks.

          Define “low” and explain how would you make that something objective for this your sentence to not look awfully stupid.

          • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            My friend, the recognized “safe” level of lead is literally no lead. Any more than literally 0ppm is above safe lead levels.

            Just because it isn’t considered lead poisoning, doesn’t mean it’s safe.

            Do some research before you pop off about stuff you don’t understand:

            You will find no evidence that lead at any level is safe. In fact, previous research which suggested that lower levels were fine are being refuted by more recent studies, that show quite the opposite.

            • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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              My friend, the recognized “safe” level of lead is literally no lead. Any more than literally 0ppm is above safe lead levels.

              That’s not what I’m talking about and this sentence too reaches the “Soviet lecture for kolkhozniks” level of cringe.

              By 0 do you mean “under 10^(-10)”, or “under 10^(-13)”, or what?

              I know what lead is.

                • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                  Didn’t have an opportunity to make it clearer due to opponent’s smartassing tone, so: the argument was that it does matter how much probability there is of lead getting into your water.

                  Since, as even people under this post explain, it happens differently with different water composition, whether there is vibration, whether some sharp item floats through the pipe etc.

                  So a lead pipe doesn’t necessarily poison all water passing through it. Just sometimes does that.

                  Same as a punctured cast iron pipe doesn’t leak always, only when the pressure is right, when some coating of various nature over the puncture gets dissolved or damaged by vibration, etc.

              • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                A single molecule of lead in a human body is too much. Does that answer your question?

                And I’m aware the chances of a specific person consuming lead are slim for most pipes, the problem is there are so many lead pipes throughout the country, that I’d be willing to bet money there are a number of people drinking lead contaminated water right now.

                It’s like the lottery, just because the chances are exceedingly small that you will win, doesn’t change the fact that it’s almost guaranteed someone will win.

              • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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                Ooh, nice. Coming in hot with the ethnic slur against Ukrainians, and then continuing on with some delightfully obnoxious pedantry.

                You should stop while you’re behind.

                It is a different word, and I misread it; as was pointed out, it’s a Russian cultural anecdote/idiom that non Russians would not necessarily understand. My apologies for starting a kerfluffle with my misunderstanding.

                • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                  You shouldn’t write anything on subjects requiring knowledge of Russian without that knowledge.

                  Колхозник means, naturally, someone living and working in колхоз .

                  And “лекция для колхозников” is a reference to a well-known (in ex-USSR) anecdote.

                  And you are an idiot.

    • Asafum@feddit.nl
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      7 months ago

      “Tonight on Hannity: Liberals want to take your Lead away!! The Romans used lead everywhere and they were a gigantic empire! Leave it to stupid liberals to think they know better than our ancestors! Take Back Our Lead!”

    • takeda@lemmy.world
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      It will have an effect in decades. The people that got affected are unlikely to get better. The biggest damage is being exposed to lead during childhood.

      • cm0002@lemmy.world
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        I think we’re starting to see this effect from the lead we removed throughout the 80s, everything from crime to religion has been falling for the past 2 decades.

        I don’t think it was all lead, but I think it’s playing a decent part.

      • The Uncanny Observer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Yeah, but decades is a blink of the eye, as these things are measured. And honestly, I don’t think a fair amount of Congress has even one more decade left in them.

    • Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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      I doubt it. While lead isn’t ideal for delivering water, it’s not as bad as you think. Once scale builds up in the pipe it didn’t leech lead. The problem Flint had is they switched water sources and destroyed the scale so it went back to bare lead.

      I wouldn’t install new lead pipes but my point is that many old lead ones are probably fine. Ones that aren’t fine so need to be replace though.

      • maniclucky@lemmy.world
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        I’ve seen this comment before. My counter: can you assure me that, for example, a new homeowner that doesn’t know better won’t disturb the scale? They won’t have a leaky faucet and mess with the pipes? Or something like Flint doesn’t happen ever again where necessary infrastructure changes necessitate disturbing the scale?

        This ‘solution’ only ‘works’ if you leave it completely alone and never touch it. So don’t get new appliances, never have a plumber fix some things, never update that water main that’s gonna break down any time now. It’s a very short sighted ‘solution’ to the problem. I’d hazard it’s a good argument for triage. Cities that need new infrastructure anyway go first kind of thing. But fobbing it off as ‘its fine’ isn’t ok.

        • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          I don’t think they were saying that we shouldn’t replace them, but rather that it’s unlikely to have a marked impact on things like religious adherence.

          For the most part, the concerning lead is in the municipal portion of the water supply, not in the areas a homeowner can disturb. (Not all of course, but it was largely phased out of home construction in the 30s). Replacing appliances or having a plumber work aren’t going to cause issues, and since the 80s having a service line or municipal water main break is a quick way to get non-lead installed.
          Lead doesn’t contaminate water super fast, the water needs to be in contact with it for a bit before concentrations start to rise to immediately actionable levels. That’s why the biggest source of concern for contamination are municipal water mains and home service lines: water doesn’t flow as quickly so it can accumulate more contamination, and there’s a larger volume making it harder to flush the contaminated water. (If you have lead household plumbing, letting the water run for a minute or two will reduce the concentration below actionable levels. You can’t do that if the contamination is from the water main)

          You are entirely correct that pipe scale is not a “solution”.
          There’s no safe concentration of lead, which is why we need to replace all the pipes, a process that started in the 80s. Usually doing it as part of routine maintenance is fine because it’s not usually an emergency. The original plan to be done by the 2060s made a lot of assumptions about infrastructure maintenance being done on time, and people not making short sighted dumbfuck choices like the Flint emergency financial manager.

          So we need to fix it as quickly as is reasonable, but we don’t need to freak out over it, and we probably won’t really see many marked changes like we did with leaded gas, just “no huge catastrophe”, and average water lead levels dropping from 3 parts per billion to 1 or less.

        • Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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          I don’t see how a homeowner could affect pipes upstream like that. I have been under the assumption they are talking about replacing city/count/state pipes and not pipes that landowners are responsible for. The article doesn’t state either way.

          And there is no guarantee shit won’t get fucked up. But actually listening to people when they say what you want to do will fuck up the pipes sure helps. So, the opposite of what Flint did.

          • maniclucky@lemmy.world
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            The first time I saw the argument, it was in relation to pipes in one’s home and I’m not an expert on plumbing. I just felt the idea of “leave it alone and it’ll be fine” is a really bad one and that it should be pushed back. I did acknowledge municipal pipes a bit, but my argument could use refinement.

    • Baron Von J@lemmy.world
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      Yes. 😕 They were originally coated on the interior so there wasn’t direct exposure of the lead to the water. But lack of funding (in some cases deliberate, see Flint, MI) for maintenance leads to the coating wearing away, resulting in contamination of the water. There’s plenty of Starving The Beast going on with things like this (also see bridges collapsing and public schools failing) by conservatives to try and grift on replacing public infrastructure with private ownership. Pretty disgusting.

      • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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        Purely pedantically: the coating isn’t applied to the pipes, it forms there from a reaction between the water and the pipe material.
        It’s not something that maintained by directly putting it on the pipes, but by managing the composition of the water supply, which they can’t not do.

        http://www.sedimentaryores.net/Pipe Scales/Lead Solubility.html

        The issue in Flint wasn’t that they cut maintenance funding, but that they cut water supply funding and so the utility switched from Detroit water (fine, stable and nice to pipes) to local river water which had a different acidity which destroyed the coating.

        I agree with all your conclusions, just wanted to let you know why we’re not constantly digging up pipes to fix the coating. 😊

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      It’s actually not uncommon in industrialized countries, and a lot of countries have similar active projects to phase them out. Flint was a wake-up call to places outside the US as well, so everyone has been accelerating their efforts, since there’s a good example of how bad a “normal” error can make things.

      Other countries don’t often have to advertise that their governments are doing their jobs as much as the US has, since they don’t have as much “all public spending is waste” rhetoric.

    • Blackmist
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      It’s OK, they’re only in places like Flint which is full of black people that nobody cares about, or Florida where everyone is already too brain damaged for anybody to really notice the difference.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      It’s worse than you think.

      You know those old ill maintained public schools?

      The combination of not just old lead pipes, but being shut down for extended periods mean lots of children are getting lead poisoning at school.

      https://www.gao.gov/blog/protecting-children-lead-exposure-schools-and-child-care-facilities

      So even if your house and local water is fine, your kids might be getting dosed up with lead at a young age, which is when it’s most impactful.

      Lead is a serious problem that lots of people assume was fixed when we took it out of gas. It helped, but there’s still lots of lead around.

      It’s going to be one of those things future generations look back on and go “no wonder they were so fucking crazy”.

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      Nope, they’re actually still pretty common across the industrialized world. It’s not just a US thing.

      We recognized the potential for harm decades ago, but for the most part it’s not a critical issue due to some minutiae of how lead pipes work in practice.

      Incidents like Flint made it clear that the consequences of messing up that minutiae are big enough that we really, really shouldn’t be relying on them.

      So this isn’t billions of dollars in emergency response, it’s billions of dollars in preventative maintenance, which is even better. 😊

    • bluGill@kbin.social
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      We stopped using lead in the 80s - the existing pipes are mostly still there and working just fine. If you are in a building or city built before 1985 assume there is lead in the plumbing someplace and take action. The more important thing you can do is let drinking water run for a minute before drinking (or install a RO drinking water system that will remove lead - regular filters will not - RO is most common of that that will).

      With a little care (much of it chemistry - meaning your water department - not much lead will leach from your pipes and you are okay. Okay should not be confused with good, 0 lead is what you want. However it isn’t feasible to replace all pipes in a day and so step one is doing as little damage as possible, then we reduce even that.

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        install a RO drinking water

        People will get one for their whole house, which is great unless your home has leaded pipes…

        It sounds like something people would think of, but they often don’t.

        If your house has leaded pipes, you can get a small RO either by your sink, or before the hose that connects to your fridge is a better plan. It doesn’t have to be by your fridge, it can be where the hose meets pipe which is usually out of the way.

        The real solution is replacing the piping, but that shits gets expensive.

        A small RO to your fridge is doable even when renting, and if you get tests done and it’s high, some landlords would pay it just to show they’re not liable and did something to address the issue if it’s high.

        • bluGill@kbin.social
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          A whole house ro filter is evpensive, so I doubt most will install one vs a drinking water system. Most plumbers won’t know about a whole house system much less sell one.

          unless you live in an area where the water is so bad your showers dosen’t get you clean. Then you can get one - but you should have one.

          • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            Because of urban sprawl lots of homes in cities have wells still.

            House built in the 40s before city water had expanded can still be on a well, and septic tanks.

            Like lead pipes it’s something that just never got updated.

            Although because of the risk of old septic tanks collapsing, some cities have programs where if you hook up the to city services for switching and filling in the septic can get spread over like 20-30 years as an add on to your water bill.

            • bluGill@kbin.social
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              there is normally nothing wrong with well water. I have lab reports on my current well to prove it.

    • kerrigan778@lemmy.world
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      They’re all sealed theoretically, but shit goes wrong like in Flint, still having the lead pipes with sealers is theoretically not dangerous but is considered a bit of a ticking time bomb.

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    Like, to actually do it? Or for companies to pocket the money and give up on it soon after, like with the infrastructure upgrade we should already have?

    • VinnyDaCat@lemmy.world
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      Looks like it outside of Cali and the north east, assuming they don’t fight it like they fight everything anyone on the left tries to do for them.