After the story of the Flint Michigan water crisis unfolded in the media last year, I read a news story
reporting that lead had been found in the water at Ardmore Elementary
School and that water fountains and sinks had been turned off. I became
curious. Was the drinking water in our county schools safe?
So in January of 2016 I decided to write to PGCPS CEO Dr. Maxwell and began a long inquiry asking what tests had been done in Prince George’s County Schools to measure for lead. Here is what I learned:
The school system performed water
tests from 2009 to 2012 and found that at least 88 schools exceeded EPA
allowable lead levels. (Read the list of “Prince George’s County Public Schools Fixtures that are Valved Off” which was sent to me from PGCPS). The majority of schools with lead contamination are elementary schools.
As of December 2016, the school system
had not done anything to remediate this other than simply to turn off
faucets in the majority of these schools.
At first, PGCPS told me that they were fixing the lead problem. I was sent a document titled “PGCPS Lead in Water Program”
that explained a four-phase plan to fix the lead problem. This document
said that a Request for Proposals (RFP) had been submitted “to
remediate the remaining classroom water fountains and sinks throughout
the system.” This was “Phase Four” of the plan.
You can imagine my surprise to learn
that in fact the information PGCPS had sent me was not accurate. When I
asked PGCPS to share the details of the “Phase Four” plan, they
responded on October 7, 2016 with an email saying that they had made a mistake...
https://pgcabs.org/2017/03/10/what-i-learned-about-lead-in-the-water-in-prince-georges-county-schools/
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