Friday, May 24, 2019

Drinking fountains in Queens public parks are loaded with lead

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Gothamist


The water from one drinking fountain in Pelham Bay Park in the Bronx has 50 times as much lead in it as permitted by federal regulations, according to an official test. Another at a tennis court in Cunningham Park in Queens has nearly 23 times above what officials consider safe.


The New York City Department of Parks and Recreation has published early results from its program to test for lead contamination at its public drinking fountains. And while many of the numbers are alarming, they’re also “very common” for cities with aging, lead-based plumbing, according to Marc Edwards, a civil engineer at Virginia Tech who helped uncover harmful lead levels in Flint, Michigan.


A Gothamist/WNYC analysis of the city’s data found that, out of the 448 fountains checked thus far, 20 fountains (4.5 percent of the early total) tested above the federal standard of 15 parts per billion (ppb). By comparison, in a similar exercise carried out in New York City public schools in 2017, roughly 8 percent of water sources tested above the same threshold once all the results were tallied.


The testing program is a component of Mayor Bill de Blasio’s LeadFreeNYC campaign to eliminate childhood lead exposure in the city. The parks department said drinking water from public fountains is not a known source of exposure, but the city’s health commissioner, Dr. Oxiris Barbot, said the tests “will ensure that we leave no stone unturned.”


Research has shown that even low levels of lead exposure can cause reduced IQ, hyperactivity and other behavioral problems in children. In adults, lead is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease and other health issues.


Sampling in parks and playgrounds started on May 6th in Queens. All of the city’s 3,500-plus public fountains are scheduled to be tested by June 14th. Two samples are drawn for each source, one after a fountain has sat unused for up to 18 hours prior to testing, and another after a flush of several seconds to help determine how deep the source of contamination in the plumbing goes. Any fountain that exceeds 15 ppb will be turned off until it can be fixed, officials say. Test results are to be updated on a weekly basis.


At the Dry Harbor Playground in Forest Park in Queens, a drinking fountain where children regularly play came in at 296 ppb, nearly 20 times the federal standard.


“There's no doubt that that's too much lead to be drinking from a fountain,” Edwards said. “You should be worried about it. You should remediate that tap. That shows there's a hazard.”

 This investigation only started a few weeks ago and Queens parks dominate the list. And despite Gothamist's headline and the odious NYC Parks officials marginalizing this vast public health hazard, these are a lot of parks with high level toxicity and not "some".


5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mayor Diblassio doesn't care. He will pass the buck to everyone else.

Gino said...

Yeah the dopes used cheap easy lead-tin solder to fix plumbing fixtures.
They all need to be fired and jobs need to be by qualification and merit--Not sons friends & brother-in-law's.
The correct way is silver solder (Sil-flux) but that takes experience and the proper torch & gas to do correctly.
-- always let the water run a couple seconds for a lower "dose"of lead.

-Gino

Anonymous said...

Great, so now the city is just going to turn off all the fountains everywhere, because it will take years to fix the issue. So instead of being sued from here on out they will turn them off and there will be no working fountains in the summer heat.

Even if there is a bit more lead then allowed, the few sips you take every so often isn't going to do anything to you. Its not like you are chugging fountain water all day every day.

We have survived all these years with these fountains, and nothing has happened. Now because of this report people are going to be lined up to sue the city for all these "illnesses and problems" they have because one time they drank from a fountain.

Anonymous said...

I would be more worried about bums and thugs using the water fountains as urinals - they should be testing for the amount of human & animal urine on the water fountain spouts.

Anonymous said...

If you drink more lead, you can more easily be led.
Lot cheaper than putting lithium in the water supply
like they do in Japan.