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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Wednesday, Dec 14 2016

Full Issue

Tiny Water Systems Allowed To Skip Lead Testing Endangering Millions

The number of people getting lead-contaminated drinking water, or water not properly tested for lead, since 2010 is about 4 million. Meanwhile, it's been a year since Flint's mayor declared a state of emergency but residents' tap water is still unsafe to drink. And EPA reverses its guidance on the impact of fracking on drinking water quality.

USA Today: 4 Million Americans Could Be Drinking Toxic Water And Would Never Know

Tiny utilities - those serving only a few thousand people or less - don’t have to treat water to prevent lead contamination until after lead is found. Even when they skip safety tests or fail to treat water after they find lead, federal and state regulators often do not force them to comply with the law. USA TODAY Network journalists spent 2016 reviewing millions of records from the Environmental Protection Agency and all 50 states, visiting small communities across the country and interviewing more than 120 people stuck using untested or lead-tainted tap water. (Ungar and Nichols, 12/12)

NPR: Flint, Michigan, Water Crisis A Year Later: Unfiltered Water Still Unsafe

A year ago, Flint, Mich., Mayor Karen Weaver declared a state of emergency because of lead-contaminated drinking water, attracting national outrage and sympathy, and millions of gallons of donated water. But a year later donations have slowed to a trickle, and little has changed — unfiltered water here is still unsafe to drink. (Carmody, 12/14)

The New York Times: Reversing Course, E.P.A. Says Fracking Can Contaminate Drinking Water

The Environmental Protection Agency has concluded that hydraulic fracturing, the oil and gas extraction technique also known as fracking, has contaminated drinking water in some circumstances, according to the final version of a comprehensive study first issued in 2015. The new version is far more worrying than the first, which found “no evidence that fracking systemically contaminates water” supplies. In a significant change, that conclusion was deleted from the final study. (Davenport, 12/13)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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