Audit: Feds didn’t elevate ‘significant issues’ in Benton Harbor’s water system

(The Center Square) – An Office of the Inspector General report found U.S. Environmental Protection Agency staff didn’t elevate “significant issues” in the water system in Benton Harbor, Michigan.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s report said the EPA didn’t follow its 2016 Policy on Elevation of Critical Public Health Issues when responding to evidence of drinking water lead contamination in the community’s water system.

The audit follows a lawsuit claiming local and state government officials lied to residents about whether the water was safe to drink since 2018 for the roughly 9,000-person, majority-Black town.

“For example, despite having clear information that there were increasing levels of lead in Benton Harbor’s municipal water, state and city Defendants lied to residents that the tap water was safe and recommended remediation measures that they knew were ineffective,” the lawsuit says.

The audit determined, in addition to lead level exceedances, the state cited the community’s water system for additional drinking water violations, including a significant deficiency violation notice regarding water system managerial oversight, insufficient revenue, treatment, distribution, monitoring and reporting issues.

- Advertisement -

Michigan officials didn’t recommend Benton Harbor residents drink bottled water until 2021.

Michigan issued an Administrative Consent Order to address these deficiencies.

Although EPA Region 5 staff monitored the state and local response to these issues, it didn’t alert the EPA’s Office of the Administrator to potential health risks to Benton Harbor’s residents of lead in drinking water above the 15 parts per billion action level.

“The conditions in Benton Harbor met four of the policy’s five criteria for elevation,” EPA Inspector General Sean O’Donnell said in a statement. “That this situation was not raised for higher levels of attention led us to question what circumstances would be elevated under this policy.”

EPA says staff should elevate public health and environmental risks that require higher levels of attention than the agency’s usual processes could address, such as when normal enforcement and compliance tools are not appropriate or unlikely to succeed in the near term.

An EPA staff member involved with monitoring Michigan’s response to Benton Harbor told auditors the state was addressing the lead levels promptly.

- Advertisement -

To protect public health, the audit recommends making the reporting system more effective.

spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Sports betting bill still alive in Georgia House

(The Center Square) – A bill that would allow...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

Men of Color Expo – Celebrating Men of Excellence

Tinker Federal Credit Union & PPBC Present Men of Color...

Everyday Economics: The macro backdrop is more difficult, and that matters for housing

Last week’s inflation report showed the first clear signs...

Texas House committee fines Democrats nearly $423,000 for absconding

(The Center Square) – The Texas House Committee on...

Optimism abounds for Garrity’s second historic upset, this time against Shapiro

(The Center Square) – Unseating an incumbent governor is...

Illinois Quick Hits: Ex-nonprofit exec sentenced for state, federal grant fraud

(The Center Square) – A former Chicago-area nonprofit executive...

Illinois bill would mandate infant allergy coverage, with unclear cost impact

(The Center Square) – An Illinois proposal to require...

Congress to tackle DHS shutdown, govt. funding, voter ID bill on return

(The Center Square) – After two weeks of recess,...

Trump: U.S. to blockade Strait of Hormuz after Iran peace talks falter

The U.S. Navy will blockade the Strait of Hormuz...

More like this
Related

Lawyers’ ‘misleading statements’ hang cloud over college finaid class action

A federal judge won’t stop a class action alleging...

Everyday Economics: The macro backdrop is more difficult, and that matters for housing

Last week’s inflation report showed the first clear signs...

Texas House committee fines Democrats nearly $423,000 for absconding

(The Center Square) – The Texas House Committee on...

Optimism abounds for Garrity’s second historic upset, this time against Shapiro

(The Center Square) – Unseating an incumbent governor is...