The St. Paul City Council on Wednesday approved spending $4 million in American Rescue Plan dollars to help homeowners replace lead water pipes on their property.
City officials say it's just the beginning of what they expect to be a larger, decade-long effort to get all the lead out of St. Paul's pipes.
Council Member Chris Tolbert said the money, some of which will be used as grants to offset homeowners' costs in replacing lead water pipes on their property, "will allow us to kick off [a larger plan] this summer."
Tolbert, who represents the city's Highland Park and Macalester-Groveland neighborhoods, has been leading the effort to make lead water line replacement a priority in St. Paul. As many as 26,600 St. Paul homes — 20 to 25% of residential customers — may have lead water service pipes, according to St. Paul Regional Water Services. Replacing them could cost an estimated $220 million.
At the February meeting of the city's Board of Water Commissioners, water services officials presented a 10-year plan that would remove and replace all lead water pipes, whether in the public right of way or on private property.
"I look at this as a pilot, of sorts, to troubleshoot what our issues [moving forward] are going to be," Tolbert said. "It's the start of something big."
City officials expect to launch a more comprehensive plan in 2023, when an expected $15 billion in federal infrastructure funding targeting lead pipe removal begins flowing to the states. Patrick Shea, general manager of St. Paul Regional Water Services, said Minnesota expects to receive about $43 million a year for five years.
"St. Paul is hoping to get a piece of that," Shea said.