WASHINGTON — The Trump administration said Friday it backs a 10-year deadline for most cities and towns to replace their harmful lead pipes, giving notice that it will support a tough rule approved under the Biden administration to reduce lead in drinking water.
The Environmental Protection Agency told a federal appeals court in Washington that it would defend the strongest overhaul of lead-in-water standards in three decades against a court challenge by a utility industry association.
The Trump administration has typically favored rapid deregulation, including reducing or killing rules on air and water pollution. On Friday, for example, it repealed tight limits on mercury and other toxic emissions from coal plants. But the agency has taken a different approach to drinking water.
''After intensive stakeholder involvement, EPA concluded that the only way to comply with the Safe Drinking Water Act's mandate to prevent anticipated adverse health effects ‘to the extent feasible' is to require replacement of lead service lines," the agency's court filing said.
Doing so by a 10-year deadline is feasible, the agency added, supporting a rule that was based in part of the finding that old rules that relied on chemical treatment and monitoring to reduce lead ''failed to prevent system-wide lead contamination and widespread adverse health effects.''
The EPA said in August it planned to defend the Biden administration's aggressive rule, but added that it would also ''develop new tools and information to support practical implementation flexibilities and regulatory clarity.'' Some environmental activists worried that that meant the EPA was looking to create loopholes.
Lead, a heavy metal once common in products like pipes and paints, is a neurotoxin that can stunt children's development, lower IQ scores and increase blood pressure in adults. Lead pipes can corrode and contaminate drinking water. The previous Trump administration's rule had looser standards and did not mandate the replacement of all pipes.
Standards aimed at protecting kids