Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XII— - SAFETY OF PUBLIC WATER SYSTEMS › Part Part E— - General Provisions › § 300j–19b
The EPA must set up a grant program to help cities, towns, water systems, qualified nonprofits, tribes, and state or local agencies pay for projects that lower lead in drinking water. A “lead reduction project” covers things like replacing lead service lines, testing and planning (including corrosion control), and helping pay to replace lines, with priority given to disadvantaged areas, low-income homeowners, and landlords of low-income renters. “Low-income” is set by the State Governor. A “lead service line” is a pipe that connects the water main to a building and is not lead-free. A “nontransient noncommunity water system” is a public system that serves at least 25 of the same people for more than 6 months a year. Grants require recipients to find the lead source and show how the project will reduce lead. Priority goes to disadvantaged communities (by State rules) and to systems that exceeded the lead action level in the past 3 years or projects for schools, daycares, or other places serving children or vulnerable groups. Recipients must cover at least 20% of project costs unless the EPA reduces or removes that share for affordability. Grants can be used to replace service lines, with free replacement for low-income homeowners and offers to other homeowners to pay their share. Grants to low-income homeowners cannot be more than the standard cost to replace the private part of the line. Before replacing lines, recipients must tell customers, consider other fixes like corrosion control, get customer agreement if replacing the public part requires also replacing the private part, and tell the State. Up to 4% of funds may pay EPA admin costs. A separate pilot program gives grants to municipalities with at least 30% known or suspected lead lines. The EPA must report on the pilot’s results within 2 years. Congress authorized $10,000,000 for the pilot and $100,000,000 per year for the main program for fiscal years 2022–2026. The law does not change who is responsible for lines under a water system’s control that sit on private property.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 300j–19b
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73