Pritzker signs measure to replace lead service lines
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[September 02, 2021]
By Andrew Hensel
(The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker
signed a bill to remove and replace lead service lines throughout the
state, a vast undertaking that could cost hundreds of millions of
dollars and create thousands of new jobs.
Illinois becomes the second state in the nation to approve legislation
to require the replacement of lead drinking water pipes, which can
deliver toxic lead in each glass of water.
Illinois has more lead pipes than any other state in the nation, with at
least 686,000 connecting homes to water mains, and based on a 2020
Metropolitan Planning Council (MPC) report, Black and Latin communities
are affected the most.
State Rep. Lamont Robinson Jr. said this new law will help ensure safe
drinking water for those communities.
"Now that it’s on the books, this new law will prioritize some of
Illinois’ most vulnerable, as communities of color see the majority of
lead service lines in our state. Everyone deserves clean drinking
water,” he said.
The replacement process will create a number of jobs for Illinoisans
according to a report from the MPC, over 20 years of lead service line
replacement could create around 11,225 jobs per year and over $1 billion
in related economic activity.
While jobs will be created, Illinois also might require some tax-payer
funding, according to deputy director of the Illinois Environmental
Council, Colleen Smith.
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"We are really pushing for that federal funding," Smith said. "There was
money passed through the American Rescue Act that we believe can help
but in order to do this effectively we are going to need municipal,
state, and federal help."
Advocates of President Joe Biden's Build Back Better agenda are calling
on Congress to secure $45 billion in federal funding nationwide.
Jeremy Orr, senior attorney for the Safe Water Initiative at NRDC, said
that Illinois will be ready when the funding comes.
“Lead in drinking water is one of the biggest environmental health
threats facing Illinoisans and people throughout the country, but this
law will make the state a leader in equitably fixing the problem," Orr
said. "As lawmakers in D.C. consider a federal infrastructure package,
Illinois is ahead of the pack in showing it is ready to put those
infrastructure dollars to work.”
The legislation will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2022.
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