Lead service line replacement bill passes Senate, heads back to House
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[May 29, 2021]
By TIM KIRSININKAS
Capitol News Illinois
tkirsininkas@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Senate passed a
bill Friday which would require water utilities to replace lead service
lines.
House Bill 3739, known as the Lead Service Line Notification and
Replacement Act, would require all water utilities to compile an
inventory of all known lead water service lines and submit a plan for
removal and replacement of the lines to the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency.
Although the installation of new lead service lines has been banned
since the 1980s, Illinois has more than 636,000 lead service lines still
in operation, according to data from the Metropolitan Planning Council.
That number accounts for more than one-eighth of all lead service lines
still in use in the United States, according to the Illinois
Environmental Council.
“Illinois children live in a state with the largest number of lead
service lines, increasing the risk of neurological and behavioral
abnormalities due to lead exposure,” chief Senate sponsor Melinda Bush,
D-Grayslake, said during debate on the bill Friday. “The state of
Illinois has a clear mandate to responsibly plan for the replacement of
toxic lead service lines.”
Under the bill, water utilities would be required to submit an initial
plan for lead service line replacement by April 15, 2024, with a final
plan due to IEPA by April 15, 2027.
The bill allows water utilities to apply for extensions to the
deadlines, if needed. The bill would also establish a state-run grant
program to assist in minimizing the costs of lead line replacement.
Bush said the long deadlines allow for communities to plan funding for
the removal and replacement projects, which Republicans raised as a
major concern to the legislation.
Bush responded the state is prepared to receive federal funding to
assist in minimizing the cost of lead service line removal, which she
said is estimated to cost near $5 billion.
She added a total of more than $45 billion in proposed funding for lead
service line replacement is moving through Congress, and that the state
would also explore using funding made available through the federal
coronavirus relief packages.
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Senator Melinda Bush, D-Grayslake, speaks on the
Senate floor Friday regarding House Bill 3739, the Lead Service Line
Notification and Replacement Act. The bill passed the Senate and
will head back to the House. (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, said she was also concerned
that most of the federal funding would be directed to large cities
in northern Illinois.
“My fear is that for the smaller communities that many of us
represent, …that what we have here could be a huge problem for them
to be able to invest and improve their infrastructure,” Rezin said.
Bush said the state would continue to explore ways to support
smaller communities, including by setting up grant and support
programs through the Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity.
“I think that the plan gives them enough time, and I believe that
those dollars will be there,” Bush said.
The bill also establishes a Lead Service Line Replacement Advisory
Board under the IEPA which would be responsible for advising the
agency on best practices for lead service line replacement and
reviewing performance of lead line removal.
The advisory board would also be responsible for developing
“long-term revenue options” for funding the replacement of lead
service lines, according to the bill language. A dedicated fund for
the removal of lead service lines would also be created in the state
treasury.
The bill passed the Senate 46-10, and will head back to the House,
which must decide whether to accept an amendment made by the Senate.
It previously passed the House 76-31.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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