Chicago expands lead pipe removal program - Axios Chicago

2022-05-15 00:09:54 By : Ms. Julie Zhang

Axios Chicago is an Axios company.

More Chicagoans can now get their toxic lead water lines removed for free under recent rule changes that expand income eligibility.

Why it matters: As we reported earlier this week, city officials promised in 2020 to remove 400 to 800 lead water lines a year.

The details: When the program launched, applicants had to prove they had high levels of lead in their water and a yearly income below $65,550 for a family of three, for example.

Of note: Residents whose income doesn't qualify have to pay for removal themselves, even though city code required lead pipes until 1986.

The latest: President Biden said Wednesday he's committed to removing all 400,000 lead service lines in Chicago in a decade.

Pro tips: If your home was built before 1986, you probably have lead pipes. Health experts recommend taking these precautions to reduce lead:

💧 Filter all drinking water with an NSF-certified device.

🚰 Run taps for five minutes before consuming water anytime you haven't run your faucets for more than six hours.

🍼 Never drink hot water from the tap or use it for baby formula, as heavy metals concentrate in heated water.

🧪 Get your water tested by the city for free by calling 311, but know it's just a snapshot of your water quality at that moment, not a definitive lead test.

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