The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

This Louisiana town has a serious problem with lead in its water. It won’t be the only one this year.

January 6, 2017 at 4:16 p.m. EST
St. Joseph, La., Mayor Elvadus Fields Jr. says problems with the town’s drinking water should have been fixed years ago. (Bill Feig/The Advocate via AP)

In the tiny town of St. Joseph, La., a local preacher has temporarily suspended baptisms, figuring that if officials don’t want people drinking the tainted water, he ought not to be plunging them into it, either.

“I just don’t feel comfortable immersing people in that water,” Pastor Donald Scott told the Advocate, a Baton Rouge newspaper, recently. “I’m pretty sure God understands.”

For years, the mostly poor, mostly black, rural seat of Tensas Parish in northeastern Louisiana has struggled with aging infrastructure and deteriorating water quality. The system is plagued with leaks. Often, what flows from households’ taps is brown and smelly, the result of high levels of iron and manganese, and residents have grown accustomed to regular notices to boil their water.

But it recent weeks, the problems have deepened significantly.

In mid-December, the state’s governor declared a public health emergency there after tests showed elevated lead levels in a private residence and at City Hall. Health officials now say they have detected lead levels exceeding the federal “action level” of 15 parts per billion in nearly 100 of the town’s homes and businesses — or more than 20 percent of those tested.

Residents, who have been told to steer clear of their taps, are living off bottled water provided by the state. And while lawmakers have set aside funding for much of the estimated $8 million it will take to fix the town’s pipes, change won’t come quickly.

“This could take a year or longer,” Jimmy Guidry, a Louisiana state health officer who’s been overseeing the water monitoring in St. Joseph, said in an interview Thursday.

The issues in St. Joseph — crumbling infrastructure, a paltry budget and overwhelmingly low-income residents at risk of being poisoned by their own water — are increasingly the problems of towns and cities across the United States.

‘If I could afford to leave, I would.’ In Flint, a water crisis with no end in sight.

“How do you pay for maintaining or replacing aging infrastructure?” Guidry asked. “Flint, Michigan, brought a lot of attention to this. This is not Flint, as far as [the scale of] the lead levels we’re seeing. But I think this is going to become more and more of a problem for society.”

It already is.

An analysis late last year by Reuters found that Flint, where nearly 100,000 people have gone almost three years without access to safe water after an ill-fated decision to switch the city’s supply source to the Flint River, is not an aberration. The news service found thousands of other spots around the country with lead-contamination rates double those in Flint, though not all were caused by water problems. Last spring, USA Today examined federal data and found that nearly 2,000 water systems spanning all 50 states had tested for excessive levels of lead in recent years. Those systems collectively provide water to about 6 million people.

Nationwide, an estimated 6 million or more lead pipes remain in use by more than 11,000 community water systems serving as many as 22 million Americans. While some cities, such as Lansing, Mich., and Madison, Wis., have replaced all their aging lead pipes, doing so is an expensive and time-consuming undertaking — and one many communities simply cannot afford.

One city’s solution to drinking water contamination? Get rid of every lead pipe.

Schools around the country find lead in water, with no easy answers

In U.S. drinking water, many chemicals are regulated — but many aren’t

The EPA’s lead-in-water rule has been faulted for decades.