Watchdog dings EPA over lead pipe funding errors

By Miranda Willson | 05/16/2024 01:32 PM EDT

The agency risks repeating mistakes and allotting funds that don’t match state needs, the inspector general said.

Richie Nero, of Boyle and Fogarty Construction, shows the cross section of an original lead residential water service line and the replacement copper line.

Richie Nero, of Boyle and Fogarty Construction, shows the cross section of an original lead residential water service line (left) and the replacement copper line (right) outside a home where service was getting upgraded June 29, 2023, in Providence, Rhode Island. The Biden administration proposed a rule to replace all lead pipes within 10 years. Charles Krupa/AP

This story was updated May 17, 2024.

The Biden administration failed to verify data on lead in drinking water before disbursing money to remove the contaminant, causing some states to receive more than their fair share, according to a watchdog report.

The infrastructure law in 2021 included a record $15 billion for states to replace lead pipes, which can expose people to dangerous levels of the toxic heavy metal. There are over 9 million lead pipes in drinking water systems across the U.S., and EPA has proposed a regulation to phase them out within 10 years.

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But the administration likely relied on inaccurate data when divvying up some of the infrastructure law funds last year, the EPA Office of Inspector General said Thursday. The agency was supposed to allocate dollars to each state according to their needs, but two states reported more lead pipes than they actually had, the watchdog said in a new memorandum.

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