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news
October 22, 2024
Biden administration providing funding for lead pipe replacement
By KEVIN EAGLESON GAYLORD NEWS

Joe Biden was vice president when a public health crisis exploded in Flint, Michigan, over drinking water contaminated by lead leaching from the water distribution lines into every home and school.

Now President Joe Biden and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is using money from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to replace thousands of lines running from water mains to homes and schools including nearly 13,000 in Oklahoma.

The EPA announced earlier this month $36.2 million in funding for Oklahoma to protect communities from lead in water and to ensure clean drinking water. While 12,409 lines will need to be replaced, the EPA’s 7th Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment found that an additional 16,457 service lines may contain lead. In total, 2.1% of Oklahoma’s service lines may contain lead.

Service lines carry water from a public water main to businesses and homes. Replacing those water lines is not cheap.

Oklahoma would need over $6 billion to remediate its water distribution and transmission system, according to the EPA.

Lead in water service lines can have harmful impacts on people’s health.

“We’ve known for decades that lead exposure has serious long-term impacts for children’s health. And yet, millions of lead service lines are still delivering drinking water to homes,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. A 2022 study by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that many people in the U.S. were exposed to harmful lead levels in early childhood.

“We estimate that over 170 million Americans alive today were exposed to high-lead levels in early childhood,” the authors of the PNAS study wrote. “We estimate populationlevel effects on IQ loss and find that lead is responsible for the loss of 824,097,690 IQ points as of 2015.”

“The scope of such widespread exposure, particularly from the late 1950s to early 1980s, suggests the legacy of lead continues to shape the health and wellbeing of the country in ways we do not yet fully understand.”

In 2018, a National Institutes of Health study found lead exposure leads to faster cognitive decline, a greater likelihood of developing Parkinson’s disease and the increased presence of biomarkers of Alzheimer’s disease.

According to the CDC, there is no known safe amount of lead in a person’s blood. Lead exposure can cause damage to the brain and nervous system, slowed growth and development, hearing and speech problems and learning and behavior problems such as criminal behavior.

The EPA estimates that 9 million homes nationally receive water through legacy lead pipes. Many of these pipes are in lower-income communities and communities of color. The EPA said that this creates disproportionate lead exposure burdens for such families.

Officials have been moving aggressively over the past three years to identify and replace water service lines.

In 2021, the EPA announced revisions to the Lead and Copper Rule. The new rule sets a deadline for water systems. They must report data on their lead, copper, or galvanized steel service lines. Water system operators had until Wednesday, Oct. 16, to submit their data.

In 2023, KOSU reported that Oklahoma City planned to inspect 8,500 homes built before 1987 to check for leadcontaining service lines.

In May 2017, the state of Oklahoma released a one-page flyer offering tips to combat lead exposure. Oklahomans living in a community with high levels of lead or in a home built before 1986 should flush their pipes after they have not used the water for six to eight hours, use cold water for cooking, drinking, making baby formula, and cereal, test their water, research whether the service line connected to their home is made of lead, and get tested if they are pregnant or have children.

On Oct. 8, President Joe Biden announced a commitment to replace every lead pipe within a decade. Since 2021, over 367,000 lead pipes have been replaced. The funding to Oklahoma is part of $2.6 billion in funding to replace all lead pipes in the United States.

The funding is part of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Funding will flow through the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund, a low-interest loan program available to states through the EPA.

According to an EPA press release, 49% of the $36.2 million must go to disadvantaged communities. The funding must be grant funding or principal forgiveness that does not have to be repaid.

Kevin Eagleson is reporting from Gaylord News’ Washington bureau this fall as part of an OU Daily scholarship.

Gaylord News is a reporting project of the University of Oklahoma Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication. For more stories by Gaylord News go to GaylordNews.net

Lowder: Taking time to do what is asked and needed
A: Main, news
Lowder: Taking time to do what is asked and needed
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By JADE PHILLIPS SPECIAL TO THE REGISTER 
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Tra Lowder, 48, has lived in Sequoyah County since she was 8-years-old. For the time that she has been here, she has made a name for herself at Liberty Public Schools as school secretary, where she is...
A: Main, news
SNAP benefits to be suspended Nov. 1
Due to federal government shutdown
October 28, 2025
Oklahoma Human Services (OKDHS) has been notified by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) that federal funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) will be suspended ...
A: Main, news
Town of Muldrow announces free cleanup week, November 3-7
Residents invited to dispose of household waste
By AMIE CATO-REMER EDITOR 
October 28, 2025
The Town of Muldrow will hold a town-wide cleanup from Monday, Nov. 3 through Friday, Nov. 7, offering residents a chance to dispose of unwanted household items free of charge. The cleanup will run da...
Roland man charged with burglary, threatening neighbors with knife
A: Main, news
Roland man charged with burglary, threatening neighbors with knife
By AMIE CATO-REMER EDITOR 
October 28, 2025
A Roland man accused of allegedly breaking into his neighbors’ apartment and threatening to kill them with a knife has been formally charged in Sequoyah County District Court. Jimmy L. Foster, 55, of ...
Trick or Treat
A: Main, news
Trick or Treat
Saturday, Nov. 1
October 28, 2025
Gans Public School Trunk-or-treat, front parking lot, 6 to 8 p.m. Halloween on Elm with the Sallisaw Police Department, 5 to 7 p.m. Halloween Costume Contest, Muldrow VFW, registration begins at 8 p.m...
Pet wellness clinic to open
news
Pet wellness clinic to open
By LYNN ADAMS SPECIAL TO THE REGISTER 
October 28, 2025
Pets are important to so many people, but possibly none more than Dr. Paula Haraway. That’s why Haraway is opening Sequoyah Animal Advocates Wellness Clinic, “a new veterinary wellness clinic created ...
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