Illinois shortchanged on lead money - Axios ChicagoLog InLog InAxios Chicago is an Axios company.
Illinois shortchanged on lead money
Illustration: Allie Carl/Axios Illinois has than any other state, but the formula used to allocate federal lead removal money Why it matters: Lead lines can leach brain-damaging toxic substances into drinking water, and Chicago's problem alone will . Last year, Illinois received just $106 million of the $15 billion in . Driving the news: A group of 50 bipartisan members of Congress, including several Illinois representatives, to EPA officials urging them to update the 2015 formula they use to allocate lead removal money. Specifically, they want that $15 billion allocated according to the number of lead lines in each state. By the numbers: Under the current formula, the seven states with 52% of the nation's lead service lines would receive just 18% of the lead removal funding, according to a survey cited in the congressional letter. Another by a water safety engineering firm calculated that Utah would get $1,229 per service line while Illinois would get $157. What they're saying: We must "ensure that allocation is equitable and states with the greatest need, like Illinois, receive the necessary funds to protect our communities from the dangers of lead exposure," U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider said in a statement. The other side: EPA officials told Axios they expect to use new lead line inventory "to inform funding allotments for FY 2023 and beyond." They didn't, however, say whether all that data would be in place in time for the next batch of payments. Get more local stories in your inbox with .Subscribe Support local journalism by becoming a member.
More Chicago stories
No stories could be found Get a free daily digest of the most important news in your backyard with Axios Chicago.Subscribe Support local journalism by becoming a member.