Mississippi city with water woes to replace some lead pipes
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Officials in Mississippi's capital city said Wednesday that workers have found lead in water pipes at 16 buildings out of nearly 24,000 checked so far — the latest indication of problems in Jackson's long-troubled water system.
Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba acknowledged “no level of lead is permissible" in drinking water.
The pipes with lead are not large distribution lines that run underneath streets, he said. Rather, they are smaller pipes that connect distribution lines to individual buildings.
Lumumba said the city will mail notices Thursday to owners of the 16 buildings to tell them about the pipes with lead. He said the city will offer filtration systems as a temporary solution until the pipes can be replaced at the city’s expense.
The dangerous pipes were found as workers were replacing water meters, and the lead caused the workers “some level of alarm," Lumumba said. The meter replacement work is about halfway finished and is expected to wrap up by March.
“Out of 23,900 meter installations, to only reveal 16 is certainly promising news that it is that few,” said Lumumba, a Democrat. “However, we're not pleased with any resident having to deal with a lead connection.”
Most of Jackson’s 150,000 residents lost running water for several days in late August and early September after heavy rainfall exacerbated problems in the city’s main treatment plant. At that time, the city had already been under a boil-water notice since late July because of cloudy water that could make people ill. The notice was lifted Sept. 15, after being in place nearly seven weeks.
Jackson has had water system problems for years, and tests by the state health department in 2015 found higher-than-acceptable lead levels in some water samples. The city continues to...