Current:Home > reviewsBiden declares emergency over lead in water in US Virgin Islands -Core Financial Strategies
Biden declares emergency over lead in water in US Virgin Islands
View
Date:2025-04-17 05:37:16
President Joe Biden declared an emergency over lead-in-water contamination in the U.S. Virgin Islands earlier this week after tests on St. Croix revealed levels more than 100 times the limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency – among the worst results a U.S. community has seen in decades.
“On a personal level, it’s been frightening and frustrating,” said resident Frandelle Gerard, executive director of Crucian Heritage and Nature Tourism, Inc.
Officials told residents to stop using their taps and began distributing bottled water. Lead can have devastating effects on childhood development, behavior and IQ scores.
But experts consulted by The Associated Press said the frightening results may be false because they came from testing that does not meet EPA standards.
“The data should be thrown into the garbage,” said Marc Edwards, a Virginia Tech lead and water expert who helped identify the lead problems in Flint, Michigan.
If the information given to St. Croix residents turns out to be bad, it won’t be the first time that’s happened. Poor information often plagues communities facing lead crises, leaving people unsure what to believe. In Flint, officials initially concealed high lead levels. When levels spiked in Newark, officials emphasized the safety of the city’s reservoirs even though it is lead pipes – not the source – that are usually the problem. In Benton Harbor, Michigan, residents waited months for officials to confirm that filters truly work, relying on bottled water.
On the Caribbean island of St. Croix, officials avoided some of those pitfalls and quickly told residents of the results. The governor declared an emergency.
“This is not something that we shy away from talking about,” said Andrew Smith, head of the Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority.
Edwards does not believe the sky-high results reflect reality and said the problem is how the samples were collected. For lead testing, workers usually take water from a household faucet. But the samples that tested so high on St. Croix were collected from the meter.
“When you (unscrew) it, you are literally ripping the leaded-brass apart and a chunk of leaded-brass gets in your sample,” he said. It produces artificially high results.
Tom Neltner, a chemical and lead expert at the Environmental Defense Fund, agreed that testing from the water meter isn’t accurate. “There’s a lot of oddities” about how St. Croix’s sampling was done, he said.
Parents in St. Croix therefore still have no idea how much lead their kids were consuming.
Here’s what is known:
In September, officials tested in the normal way, at faucets, following EPA lead testing rules. Those results showed the water was safe.
But island residents, who had long dealt with discolored water, said the color was getting even worse in recent months. So officials took more samples, this time at the meter, to see whether the utility’s pipes were the problem. It is some of these tests that first recorded astronomically high lead levels.
“We were all shocked and surprised by the results,” Smith said.
Retesting found results were still too high. Other locations including two schools, however, were low.
A more definitive answer should come soon. Local and federal officials did detailed testing to find the root cause in early November. A final report is expected in mid-December.
Smith said about 3,400 homes are affected and that the utility worked with EPA on the sampling.
Even though the tests didn’t follow the normal procedure, EPA water expert Christine Ash said “out of an abundance of caution, we are recommending that folks who use (utility) water piped to their homes not consume the water until we’re able to do further investigation to identify if there is a potential source of lead and what it might be.”
Fortunately on St. Croix, that doesn’t include everyone.
A lot of people rely on rainwater they collect in cisterns.
On the mainland, in many cities, lead pipes are the main threat to drinking water. That’s not the problem on the island, however. Instead, it’s brass fittings that contain lead and can corrode into the water, Smith said.
And regardless of the test results, the water system needs attention and fixing. Smith and his colleagues are flushing water through it. When people don’t use the water, it sits and can pick up contaminants. They are also fixing how they treat their water so it is less corrosive and working to replace components that contain lead. That replacement work might take 12 to 18 months, Smith said. Plus, the island’s water system is old and in the coming years, major upgrades are planned.
Gerard said people on the island are overwhelmed.
“There’s this sense of well, what’s next for St. Croix?” she said, adding that residents have endured a devastating hurricane, the pandemic and water contamination from a refinery, all in recent years. Many people gave up on tap water long ago, she said, and it’s hard to know what to make of these latest developments.
“As a fairly literate person, reading the reports has almost left us with more questions than answers.” Many people probably don’t understand just how high these lead test results are, she said.
As for the temporary measure of flushing lots of water through the pipes to reduce lead, it’s ill-suited to the island, she said.
“We’re a water conserving society,” Gerard said. “Water is a precious commodity.”
__
The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment
veryGood! (985)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Amid Louisiana’s crawfish shortage, governor issues disaster declaration
- Foo Fighters, Chuck D, Fat Joe rally for healthcare transparency in D.C.: 'Wake everybody up'
- Steely Dan keyboardist Jim Beard dies at 63 after sudden illness
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Missouri governor offers ‘deepest sympathy’ after reducing former Chiefs assistant’s DWI sentence
- NY man who killed Kaylin Gillis after wrong turn in driveway sentenced to 25 years to life
- LNG Exports from Mexico in Limbo While Pipeline Project Plows Ahead
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Photos of male humpback whales copulating gives scientists peek into species' private sex life
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Say cheese! Hidden Valley Ranch, Cheez-It join forces to create Cheezy Ranch
- Lawyer behind effort to remove Fani Willis from Georgia Trump case testifies before state lawmakers
- Court order permanently blocks Florida gun retailer from selling certain gun parts in New York
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Microsoft engineer sounds alarm on AI image-generator to US officials and company’s board
- Wyoming Considers Relaxing Its Carbon Capture Standards for Electric Utilities, Scrambling Political Alliances on Climate Change and Energy
- Alyssa Naeher makes 3 saves and scores in penalty shootout to lift USWNT over Canada
Recommendation
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Which streamer will target password sharing next? The former HBO Max looks ready to make its play
More Black women say abortion is their top issue in the 2024 election, a survey finds
Judas Priest's 'heavy metal Gandalf' Rob Halford says 'fire builds more as you get older'
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Why Beauty Babes Everywhere Love Millie Bobby Brown's Florence by Mills Pimple Patches
Texas approves land-swapping deal with SpaceX as company hopes to expand rocket-launch operations
3 sizzling hot ETFs that will keep igniting the market