Protecting Our Waters

Environment Georgia hosts webinar to get the lead out during National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week

On Oct. 26, Environment Georgia hosted a webinar in honor of National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week during which panelists spoke about the need to ensure safer school drinking water for our children.

Toxic threats

Georgia’s schools get an “F” when it comes to lead contamination in their drinking water, and remediation is long overdue.

That was the consensus from experts participating in a webinar hosted by Environment Georgia on Oct. 26 during National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week. Panelists spoke about the need to ensure safer school drinking water for our children by using a free, statewide program to test for lead — a potent neurotoxin that affects how children learn, grow and behave.

“States are failing to make the grade when it comes to keeping lead out of drinking water at school” said Jennifer Duenas, Environment Georgia’s clean water associate. “Georgia has no drinking water standard and no policy requiring testing.”

Environment Georgia and our national network are advocating for a wide array of solutions to the problem, including removing all lead-containing pipes and plumbing parts from schools, increasing water bottle filling stations and large-scale upgrades to clean water infrastructure.

 

Watch the recorded webinar.

Lean more about our Get the Lead Out campaign.

Photo: Medical experts estimate that more than 24 million American kids will lose IQ points due to lead exposure. Credit: Duplass via Shutterstock

John Stout
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