Illinois report eyes 90,000 jobs from lead pipe replacements

A new report urges Illinois to accelerate replacement of nearly 1.5 million lead service lines, estimating it could create up to 90,000 jobs over a decade. The plan calls for prioritizing high-exposure areas and diversifying the workforce amid a multi-billion-dollar funding gap. Advocates highlight the public health crisis posed by the toxic pipes.

Illinois faces a significant public health challenge with nearly 1.5 million service lines containing or suspected to contain lead, a neurotoxin associated with cognitive, reproductive, and cardiovascular issues. The state has the highest number of such pipes nationwide, including 667,000 confirmed and 820,000 suspected lines, with Chicago accounting for almost 30 percent. A recent report by groups including the Metropolitan Planning Council, Current, Elevate, and HIRE360 proposes turning this infrastructure backlog into an economic opportunity by generating tens of thousands of jobs through replacements. Justin Williams, a senior manager at the Metropolitan Planning Council, warned, “The longer we put off taking care of our water infrastructure, the more expensive it’s going to get, the more that we’re going to be looking at water rates increasing to deal with that, and the more people are going to be in the position where they’re not going to have access to safe and clean drinking water.” Replacement costs range from $4,000 to $13,000 per line statewide and over $30,000 in Chicago, totaling $6 billion to $10 billion for the state. Federal funding from the bipartisan infrastructure law provides about $1 billion to Illinois, part of a $15 billion national allocation, but falls short of needs. The report projects 2,000 direct and 9,000 indirect jobs from current funds, rising to 35,000 direct and 55,000 indirect—or 90,000 total—with full state support over ten years. Jay Rowell of HIRE360 noted, “It’s a bit of a chicken and egg: Unless you know how much money is going to be allocated to this — how many opportunities are coming down the pipe — they’re not going to add additional people to apprenticeship programs.” It also pushes for diversity, as Chicago's apprentices are only 3.8 percent women and 10 percent Black, by mandating equity in contracts. Williams added, “We are the envy of the world in terms of our access to fresh drinking water. We need to be really thoughtful stewards of that.”

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Villagers in San Ignacio, Chile, celebrate the inauguration of new rural drinking water service benefiting 281 families, with Public Works Ministry official.
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Public works ministry awards rural water service for 281 families in San Ignacio

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Chile's Public Works Ministry (MOP) signed on Sunday the adjudication of a new rural sanitary service in San Ignacio, Ñuble, benefiting 281 families with continuous drinking water. The project is part of seven ongoing works reaching 444 rural households in the region. Seremi Luis Carrasco described the progress as a concrete change in people's lives.

The Trump administration is distributing billions in federal funding for clean drinking water while framing the effort as part of the Make America Healthy Again initiative. The money stems from a 2021 law passed under the previous administration.

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Sean Stratton, a Rutgers University doctoral student, has tested more than 140 homes in East Trenton, New Jersey, for lead contamination over the past two years. He defended his dissertation in February and plans to graduate in May, raising concerns among residents and community groups about who will continue the comprehensive household testing. The neighborhood was added to the EPA's Superfund National Priorities List last July due to widespread soil contamination.

Rand Water has begun phase one of a maintenance programme expected to run until 2 June, with experts saying the work will support long-term water supply reliability.

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