TUE AM News: Biden in Milwaukee to announce finalized regulations to replace lead pipes within 10 years

— President Joe Biden in Wisconsin today will announce the EPA has finalized federal regulations requiring drinking water systems in the U.S. to replace lead service lines within 10 years.

He will also announce the EPA is investing $2.6 billion more into drinking water upgrades and lead pipe replacements, funded by his Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

Of the new funding, 49% must be provided to disadvantaged communities as grant funding or principal forgiveness that does not have to be repaid. EPA is also announcing the availability of $35 million in competitive grant funding for reducing lead in drinking water.

The city of Milwaukee, where Biden will make the announcement, is already set to replace lead pipes within the 10-year timeline. So far, lead pipe replacement in the city, funded by a $30 million investment from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law in 2024, has cut what had been a 60-year timeline. Similarly, Edgerton, southeast of Madison, has replaced 100% of its known lead pipes after receiving funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. 

Biden established the Lead and Copper Rule during his first year as president; that required all lead service lines to be replaced. Since then, he has secured $15 billion in dedicated funding for lead pipe replacement and $11.7 billion more that can be used for drinking water projects and lead pipe replacement. So far, 367,000 lead pipes in the U.S. have been replaced, benefitting around 918,000 people.

Senior Administration White House officials said they are sure 99% of the cities will make the 10-year deadline, and the EPA will aggressively pursue a timeline that stays in line with the president’s vision for the 1% that don’t.

The officials also said Vice President Kamala Harris and U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin have been significant partners to the EPA. They added that clean water should be a bipartisan issue.

“We’ve seen many Republicans vote for the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that made this possible,” the administration officials said. “Wisconsin’s other senator, Ron Johnson, did not vote for it, but we do think that this should be a bipartisan priority, and I hope that all of our members of Congress would vote for keeping our water clean rather than continuing to have lead in water.”

EPA estimates the final rule will prevent up to 900,000 infants from being born with a low birth weight, prevent up to 200,000 IQ points from being lost in children, and reduce up to 1,500 cases of premature death from heart disease every year.

Of Biden’s total $7.2 billion in public and $8 billion in private sector investments into clean energy, manufacturing and infrastructure:

  • $1.7 billion has gone toward providing affordable, reliable high-speed internet to Wisconsinites. So far, 72,000 homes and small businesses are connected.
  • $4.1 billion has gone toward transportation. This includes rebuilding roads and bridges, expanding transit and rail and modernizing ports and airports. This includes $1 billion in funding that the Biden-Harris Administration announced earlier this year to replace the Blatnik Bridge that connects Duluth, Minnesota, to Superior, Wisconsin. 
  • $3.3 billion from Microsoft has gone toward bringing a new data center to create over 4,000 jobs to Racine, Wisconsin on the site of a proposed investment from Foxconn in the Trump Administration that never materialized.

— Security Health Plan has named Dr. Renee Smith as its chief medical officer. 

Smith was previously associate chief medical officer for Security Health Plan and was system chief medical officer with Blanchard Valley Health System in Ohio before that. 

Smith earned her medical degree from the Medical College of Wisconsin and completed her family medicine residency with Waukesha Family Medicine Residency. She earned her master of business administration from UW-Oshkosh. 

Security Health Plan CEO Krista Hoglund said Smith’s “extensive experience in health plan leadership and medicine brings a wealth of knowledge to our organization.” 

Top headlines from the Health Care Report… 

— Ellie Mental Health announced it has opened a new mental health clinic in Waukesha to expand access to mental health services in southeastern Wisconsin. 

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TOP STORIES

Manufacturers zero in on the skills gap by enlisting young talent

The FDA is warning of serious health effects, possibly death, from a Wisconsin farm’s eggs

An expert says Wisconsin’s child care market is ‘broken.’ One Manitowoc CEO is trying to help.

AGRIBUSINESS 

– Senator Baldwin secures $3.45M for Wisconsin dairy growth

– Jacob Harbaugh of Wisconsin wins Merle Howard Award

BANKING 

– Wisconsinites will be eligible to use a free, online tax-filing system in 2025

BIOTECH 

– Unleashing the power of bacteria: Danish biosciences company Novonesis investing heavily in West Allis complex

CONSTRUCTION 

– Kwik Trip plans new gas station, convenience store in Kenosha

– $50 million mixed-use plan for long-vacant site across from Lambeau Field concerns neighbors

ECONOMY 

– With job, population growth, Downtown BID says the city ‘punches above its weight’

EDUCATION 

– Once untouchable, the UW state funding formula might be changed

ENVIRONMENT 

– State estimates around 40 percent of private wells contain pesticides

FINANCIAL SERVICES 

– Phoenix Investors names CFO

HEALTH CARE 

– Wisconsin will need almost 10K more elder care workers to keep up with aging baby boomers

– Mental health clinic opens in Pewaukee

– Wisconsin is on the front lines of psychedelic research that could reach millions

MEDIA 

– Albert the Alley Cat was America’s No. 1 weather cat puppet, on Milwaukee TV

POLITICS 

– Eric Hovde said trans youths have highest rate of suicide, driven by regret. Not true.

– Dire warnings, raucous crowd. Takeaways from Donald Trump’s Juneau, Wisconsin, rally

REAL ESTATE 

– $21M project to double capacity for homeless veterans in Milwaukee

RETAIL 

– What could take over Piggly Wiggly’s space in Oak Creek

– Amazon, Target and other retailers are ramping up hiring for the holiday shopping season

SMALL BUSINESS 

– On East Washington Ave., Lone Girl Taproom puts beer first

– From wooden stand to food trailer, 10-year-old Princeton Hollins squeezes success out of Phresh Lemonade business

SPORTS 

– UW brings pain to Purdue while an injured Badger battles to return

TOURISM 

– Milwaukee looking to get new cruise ship terminal by ferry dock

– Wormfarm Institute Farm/Art DTour begins Saturday in rural Sauk County

UTILITIES 

– Dozens of residents decry proposed We Energy rate increases at public meeting

PRESS RELEASES

See these and other press releases

Bank Five Nine: Celebrates 10th anniversary of cherished holiday program 

UW-Madison: Researchers use AI to identify sex-specific risks associated with brain tumors