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In this Friday, May 4, 2018 file photo, a lead service line is pulled along Phillips Avenue in Squirrel Hill.
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PWSA secures millions in state money for lead line replacements

Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette

PWSA secures millions in state money for lead line replacements

Buoyed by mil­lions in state money, the Pitts­burgh Water and Sewer Au­thor­ity is set to ac­cel­er­ate re­place­ments for un­der­ground lead pipes next year.

About $49 mil­lion ap­proved Wed­nes­day by the Penn­syl­va­nia In­fra­struc­ture In­vest­ment Au­thor­ity, or Penn­vest, should pay for re­plac­ing about 2,800 res­i­den­tial lead ser­vice con­nec­tions in 2019, city and state of­fi­cials said.

That’s up from the roughly 2,100 res­i­den­tial con­nec­tions that work­ers are re­plac­ing un­der the 2018 PWSA bud­get. Rev­e­nue from lo­cal rate­pay­ers — some $44 mil­lion — is cov­er­ing the work this year, part of on­go­ing ef­forts to keep the haz­ard­ous metal out of drink­ing wa­ter.

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“We’re ab­so­lutely thrilled at the award” from Penn­vest, PWSA spokes­man Will Pick­er­ing said. The fund­ing is prob­a­bly the big­gest grant and loan of­fer­ing that the state au­thor­ity has ever sup­plied to PWSA, he said.

PWSA looks to build on system improvements over the next 12 years
Adam Smeltz
PWSA looks to build on system improvements over the next 12 years

PWSA sought the money, which in­cludes a $13.7 mil­lion grant and a $35.4 mil­lion loan. PWSA is re­spon­si­ble for re­pay­ing the lat­ter — with a 1 per­cent in­ter­est rate — over 30 years.

“Pitts­burgh has been mak­ing great strides to pro­tect its drink­ing wa­ter, and this an­nounce­ment from Gov. [Tom] Wolf gives that work a tre­men­dous lift,” Mayor Bill Peduto said in a state­ment. The in­vest­ment “will have pos­i­tive im­pacts for de­cades to come,” he said.

Under a state or­der, PWSA is sup­posed to re­place at least 7 per­cent of its lead ser­vice lines each year af­ter high lead read­ings in some homes trig­gered the in­ter­ven­tion in 2016. The lines con­nect in­door plumb­ing in in­di­vid­ual build­ings to wa­ter mains be­neath the street.

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Those ser­vice lines are split into two sec­tions: a pub­licly owned seg­ment that’s clos­est to the main, and a pri­vately owned seg­ment that com­pletes the con­nec­tion into the build­ing. The state money will let PWSA keep re­plac­ing both seg­ments when they con­tain lead, but prop­erty own­ers must give writ­ten con­sent for the pri­vate-side work, Mr. Pick­er­ing said.

PWSA will send let­ters in No­vem­ber to cus­tom­ers whose con­nec­tions may be el­i­gi­ble for re­place­ment in 2019. The au­thor­ity plans to fo­cus on lower-in­come ar­eas, al­though it wasn’t im­me­di­ately clear Wed­nes­day which neigh­bor­hoods may be tar­geted. More de­tails should be avail­able in a week or so, Mr. Pick­er­ing said.

Still, state House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Brad­ford Woods, flayed the state fund­ing as a tax­payer-funded bail­out to “ad­dress years of city and PWSA mis­man­age­ment.” The ef­fort takes “much-needed money from wa­ter and sewer proj­ects across the state,” he said in a state­ment.

Another fre­quent PWSA critic, Al­le­gheny County Con­trol­ler Chelsa Wag­ner, ques­tioned PWSA’s ex­penses, given how many con­nec­tions it in­tends to re­place. In some other cit­ies, $49 mil­lion would be enough to re­place many thou­sands more lead pipes, Ms. Wag­ner said, call­ing for more ef­fi­ciency.

PWSA said it exceeded state's lead-line replacement goals in 2018
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
PWSA said it exceeded state's lead-line replacement goals in 2018

Mr. Pick­er­ing said PWSA is look­ing at where it can “cre­ate ef­fi­cien­cies and po­ten­tially lower costs.” The over­whelm­ing ma­jor­ity of costs are for con­struc­tion-re­lated tasks, such as ty­ing new ser­vice lines into wa­ter mains, he said.

“These con­struc­tion con­tracts are all pub­licly bid, so we’re lim­ited by what we re­ceive from in­ter­ested par­ties,” Mr. Pick­er­ing said. PWSA found its con­struc­tion costs to be com­pa­ra­ble to sim­i­lar ur­ban ar­eas such as Mil­wau­kee and Wash­ing­ton, D.C., he said.

PWSA has es­ti­mated 12,500 of some 71,000 res­i­den­tial con­nec­tions con­tain lead.

Adam Smeltz: 412-263-2625, asmeltz@post-gazette.com, @asmeltz.

First Published: October 17, 2018, 4:05 p.m.

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In this Friday, May 4, 2018 file photo, a lead service line is pulled along Phillips Avenue in Squirrel Hill.  (Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette)
Darrell Sapp/Post-Gazette
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