2021.10.21
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The sun rises over Saint Joseph River, which separates the cities of Saint Joseph and Benton Harbor. Photo © Jane Johnston / Circle of Blue

In Benton Harbor, Residents’ Complaints of Lead-Tainted Water Carry Echoes


When Carmela Patton moved into her Benton Harbor home from a nearby apartment complex, she didn’t think twice about turning on the faucet to boil noodles or get a drink.

Only late last year, after her pastor recruited her to participate in a water quality sampling program, did she learn the city was in the midst of a water contamination crisis.

She stopped drinking the water then, and rightly so, she said: Samples collected from her faucet would later show a lead level above 700 parts per billion. That’s 47 times the federal Environmental Protection Agency’s “action level,” though no amount of lead is considered safe.

So when state leaders this week advised Benton Harbor residents to drink only bottled water — a stark escalation of the government response three years into Benton Harbor’s lead-in-water crisis — Patton was unimpressed.

“It’s a long time coming,” she said. “Why not earlier? Why just now?”

This piece was originally published by Bridge Michigan and is part of the Great Lakes News Collaboration. The collaborative’s four nonprofit newsrooms – Bridge Michigan, Circle of Blue, Great Lakes now at DPTV and Michigan Radio – explore what it may take to prepare the Great Lakes region for the future climatologists say we can expect.

More on Benton Harbor's water crisis: 
More on lead service lines from Circle of Blue:

HotSpots H2O: As Famine Looms in East Africa, Humanitarian Groups Call for Urgent Action


In 2011, two failed rainy seasons thrust the Horn of Africa into the worst famine of the twenty-first century. An estimated 260,000 Somalis died of starvation, over half of them children. Antelope carcasses dotted the savanna. As crops withered, about half of the region’s livestock, whose milk millions of children relied on for nutrition, perished.

Such terrible outcomes could again be on the horizon. Climate models indicate the potential for another brutal famine in East Africa. As dry conditions bear on, humanitarian groups are calling on the international community to take action before it is too late.

As of early September, over 29 million people were already experiencing food insecurity in the region, about 500,000 of which were in the worst category of “catastrophic,” meaning severe malnutrition and starvation. If the coming months bring another dry season—an outcome which all global and regional services are projecting—millions more will be pushed into hunger.

What’s Up With Water — October 18, 2021

For the news you need to start the week, tune into “What’s Up With Water” fresh on Monday’s on iTunesSpotifyiHeart Radio, and SoundCloud.

Featured coverage from this week's episode of What's Up With Water looks at: 

  • In South Africa, garbage and high levels of bacteria are contaminating the country’s rivers, and environmental activists are struggling to hold government officials accountable.
  • In the Middle East, Israel and Jordan have signed an agreement extending their long record of water cooperation. 
  • In China, yet another province has been hit by major flooding. This time the damage is in Shanxi, a province west of Beijing that is China’s largest coal producer.
  • In the United States, flooding is also a threat, and a new study has identified major infrastructure systems that are vulnerable to rising waters.
From Circle of Blue's Archives: 

A home in Flint, Michigan, whose water crisis refocused national attention on lead pipes. Photo © J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue

Where Are Lead Service Lines? Look for Older Homes and Poverty


The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency can do more to help water utilities and the public identify neighborhoods that are more likely to have lead drinking water pipes, according to a 2020 Government Accountability Office report.

The GAO, a watchdog agency that works for Congress, concluded that the EPA has not met the requirements of a 2016 law intended to improve the agency’s public communication of lead pipe risks.

Older homes and poverty are indicators that lead service lines may be present, the report found. By combining demographic and housing data from the Census Bureau with geospatial data on the location of lead service lines the GAO found some striking correlations that identified neighborhoods at risk.

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