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What Next | Daily News and Analysis

There's Something in the Water

What Next | Daily News and Analysis

Slate

News, Daily News, News Commentary, Politics

4.62.3K Ratings

🗓️ 4 September 2019

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When Christopher Werth saw some paint chips falling off a radiator in his daughter’s New York City classroom, he picked one up and sent it to get tested. The results spurred him to launch a larger investigation into lead exposure in New York City classrooms. Just across the river in Newark, New Jersey, another city is dealing with its own lead troubles. Elevated levels of the metal have been found in the city’s drinking water. What do these two cases tell us about the legacy of lead in America? And what can be done about it? Guest: Christopher Werth, Senior Editor at WNYC Slate Plus members get bonus segments and ad-free podcast feeds. Sign up now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

If you live in Newark, New Jersey, your home has become this little blue dot on an online

0:11.4

map maintained by the city.

0:13.9

Click on your dot and the infrastructure beneath your house is revealed where your water

0:19.3

comes from and whether that water might have led in it.

0:23.6

Newark's water crisis is boiling over as residents demand mayor Ross.

0:27.3

The water system there has been showing dangerous levels of lead.

0:31.9

Worried and angry about lead contamination, residents of Newark, New Jersey are demanding

0:36.4

bottled water and answers.

0:38.4

You know that the water is going to be messed up all it is time.

0:42.2

Why wasn't we told?

0:48.2

Christopher Worth reports for a podcast called The Stakes.

0:51.9

It's meant the last year investigating lead contamination.

0:55.3

10% of the outlets that are being tested in Newark are above 55 to 60 parts per billion

1:02.8

and the federal standard is 15 parts per billion.

1:06.4

So we're talking about several times larger than the federal limit.

1:11.6

And how does that compare to a place like Flint?

1:13.8

This is much higher.

1:14.8

You know, we're talking about in Newark four times the federal limit and there are a

1:18.2

lot of questions about how robust that federal limit is anyway.

1:22.9

Christopher says the problem with uncovering lead like this is that once it's revealed,

1:28.9

you can start to see it everywhere, not just in the pipes underneath Newark's houses,

1:34.1

but in the water fountain at the local playground in the chipped paint on your window sill and

...

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