Chicago Tribune

Lead found in tap water in hundreds of homes tested across Chicago

CHICAGO - Amid renewed national attention to the dangers of lead poisoning, hundreds of Chicagoans have taken the city up on its offer of free testing kits to determine if they are drinking tap water contaminated with the brain-damaging metal.

A Chicago Tribune analysis of the results shows lead was found in water drawn from nearly 70 percent of the 2,797 homes tested during the past two years. Tap water in 3 of every 10 homes sampled had lead concentrations above 5 parts per billion, the maximum allowed in bottled water by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Alarming amounts of the toxic metal turned up in water samples collected throughout the city, the newspaper's analysis found, largely because Chicago required the use of lead service lines between street mains and homes until Congress banned the practice in 1986.

The testing kit results provide the most conclusive evidence yet of widespread hazards that have remained hidden for decades. Yet as Mayor Rahm Emanuel borrows hundreds of millions of dollars to overhaul the city's public water system, Chicago is keeping lead service lines in the ground.

Under the city's plumbing code - the same ordinance that for nearly a century

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune5 min read
Chicago Bears’ Lakefront Stadium Proposal: What’s Been Said, What We Know — And What We Need To Know
CHICAGO — A billion here, a billion there — pretty soon you’re talking real money. The late Sen. Everett Dirksen may not have said exactly that, but he repeatedly raised that concern about spending tax dollars. For reference, $1 billion is more than
Chicago Tribune3 min read
Backed By State Incentives, Rivian To Invest $1.5 Billion To Build New R2 EV At Illinois Plant
Rivian’s decision to launch production of its second-generation electric vehicles in Normal, Illinois, rather than Georgia, will bring $1.5 billion in capital investment and hundreds of jobs to its central Illinois factory, the automaker and Gov. J.B
Chicago Tribune2 min readAmerican Government
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson Confident DNC Will Go Smoothly Despite Recent Demonstrations: ‘We Are Prepared’
CHICAGO — Mayor Brandon Johnson on Friday disputed the notion his administration is unprepared for the Democratic National Convention and is suppressing protests, amid a nationwide spotlight on Pro-Palestinian university demonstrations that some fear

Related