The Pittsburgh Water Collaboratory and Women for a Healthy Environment join forces to investigate local water systems
The region is deep into a summer drought. Lawns are scorched brown, rivers are running low and water authorities are dipping into their reserves. Unless the skies open soon, those reserves are likely to be depleted within days, leaving tens of thousands of people without water in their taps.
It sounds like a scenario built for a Southern state, but as the experts know, it could happen just about anywhere in the country, including Western Pennsylvania.
And it鈥檚 not the only looming threat to water.
Parched summers, industrial pollution and aging water infrastructure have led to significant water challenges in the United States, including depleted reserves, source water contami91porn视频 and corroding water pipes that leach hazardous chemicals like lead.
Pitt is helping to address the region鈥檚 water issues through the Pittsburgh Water Collaboratory, a multidisciplinary research organization whose goal is to elevate water resource sustainability and resilience through community engaged collaboration.
One of those collaborators, Michelle Naccarati-Chapkis, executive director of Women for a Healthy Environment (WHE), says Pitt鈥檚 Water Collaboratory has been an invaluable partner. Back in 2019, her nonprofit organization commissioned a to determine how the region would fare under proposed EPA rules to reduce lead in the 91porn视频鈥檚 water supply. She says WHE鈥檚 study yielded concerning results: 80% of the county鈥檚 water systems reported detectable lead in their drinking water and many lacked resources for a fix. They also study analyzed operational and communications capacity, information transparency, adherence to drinking water quality standards and strategies to reduce lead in drinking water 鈥 subjects that require further study.
鈥淲e needed a part two,鈥 Naccarati-Chapkis says.
The Water Collaboratory ensured that part two would happen, thanks to its impressive network of more than 100 partner organizations, undergraduate and graduate students, researchers and faculty affiliates from the University鈥檚 School of Health Sciences, Swanson School of Engineering, Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences and Graduate School of Public and Inter91porn视频al Affairs.
Armed with streamlined internal funding through Pitt Momentum Funds, the Water Collaboratory and WHE built upon WHE鈥檚 initial work, recently for the county鈥檚 36 water systems.
That report, called Measuring Up, focused on three areas: water quality, affordability and transparency practices. While some systems earned better grades than others, the collective results weren鈥檛 dean鈥檚 list material.
鈥淣o system surveyed met best practices for transparency or affordability. That, for me, was pretty alarming,鈥 says Megan Lange, the Water Collaboratory鈥檚 outreach coordinator.
鈥淎larming鈥 because the two measures have far-reaching effects for customers. Transparency is the water system鈥檚 ability to provide accessible information on how it makes decisions, receives complaints and communicates water issues or threats. The survey found smaller city or municipal water systems were more likely to perform poorly, and that could leave customers without the knowledge needed to keep their families safe.
鈥淭here are places that do a good job, but if you鈥檙e in a smaller system, you generally have fewer employees, and that means each employee has to do a wider range of jobs,鈥 explains Daniel Bain, associate professor in the Department of Geology & Environmental Science and the faculty vice-chair of the Collaboratory.
To Bain, just as concerning as transparency is affordability. The survey revealed a high number of residential shutoffs among some water systems. In one community, 26% of customers lost service after missed payments, a statistic Bain calls 鈥渁bysmal.鈥 And, as water rates in the county rise, partly from replacement costs of lead pipes to meet EPA regulations, that shutoff rate will likely increase.
To combat that concern, the repeat team has proposed a moratorium on shutoffs and a renewed commitment to public water systems.
WHE and the Water Collaboratory are doing their part on the ground, too, distributing water filters, giving residents a blueprint for demanding quality water from their suppliers, and speaking at meetings, including one recently on Pitt鈥檚 main campus. Billed as a Water Town Hall, participants included representatives from the Water Collaboratory, WHE, Pittsburgh Water and Sewage Authority, Pittsburgh City Council and student organizations.
Although the findings noted by WHE鈥檚 study and Measuring Up seem ominous, Naccarati-Chapkis says the mere existence of those reports is reason for optimism.
Together, she says, they provide accountability, offer baseline data for future comparison and make Allegheny County residents aware of what鈥檚 coming out of their faucets.