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MDEQ officials face criminal charges for common water testing practice

New research suggests low levels of arsenic in drinking water may impact your health.
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New research suggests low levels of arsenic in drinking water may impact your health.

A common practice by operators of municipal drinking water systems is getting more scrutiny.

Last week the first criminal charges were filed in connection with the water crisis in Flint.

One of the charges caught my attention, because it includes a practice that’s the norm in Michigan cities.

Listen to the broadcast version of this story.

There are a few ways we know Flint’s water samples were manipulated. The city didn’t test at the right homes – that is, homes with lead service lines. It dropped two water samples that had the highest lead levels, citing technical reasons that defy common sense, but may or may not have technically broken the law.

But then this criminal complaint also says the manipulation of water samples goes even farther, saying the two defendants who work for Michigan’s Department of Environmental Quality "did improperly manipulate the collection of water samples" by directing residents to "pre-flush" their taps the night before they collect the water sample.

The instructions the city sent to residents who sampled for lead in their water last summer tell people to turn on their cold water tap and let it run for five minutes (that's the pre-flushing part). Then, people are supposed to wait six hours before taking their water sample.

An official at the U.S. EPA told us last fall that pre-flushing is not a “best practice,”but it’s not illegal. The EPA says it’s not a good idea, because you can significantly underestimate your lead sample results – making it appear lead levels in drinking water are lower than they really are..

Virginia Tech’s Marc Edwards says becausepre-flushingis not against the law, water system operators don’t think it’s such a bad thing.

“It kind of creates this culture where they’re thinking ‘oh, if it were really bad, EPA would tell us. EPA would force us to stop doing this,'” Edwards said.

In fact, last summer, the EPA suggested the state drop the pre-flushing suggestion from its water testing guidance altogether. But, MDEQ pushed back. Emails show that, at the time, state regulators said they’d only do that if the law required them to.

In December, the state changed its tune on this. Its guidance for cities has no mention of this pre-flushing practice anymore.

But it’s still not illegal. So why is pre-flushing mentioned in this criminal complaint?

“This is a first,” Edwards said.

Edwards says he’s never seen “pre-flushing” in a criminal charge before, even in Washington DC, where the practice was under some scrutiny. He thinks Michigan’s attorney general could have a hard time getting this charge to stick.

But a source close to this criminal investigation says it’s the combination of factors in Flint’s water sampling that merited the criminal charges: The city testing the wrong homes, the state’s regulators looking the other way and then invalidating samples with high lead levels – combined with pre-flushing – made the practice worth mentioning in the criminal complaint. All those things combined created a misleading picture of Flint's lead problem.

That’s important, because research shows lots of cities in Michigan have followed the state’s guidelines.

We filed records requests with more than 50 of the largest water operators in the state. We heard back from 41, and all but three of them pre-flush. Plainfield Township, Lansing and Saginaw were the only three that sent sampling instructions that did not include pre-flushing.

So it’s fair to say, it wasn’t just Flint. Pretty much every city has been pre-flushing.

What does that mean?

It means we might be underestimating lead levels in drinking water, especially in older cities, where lead service lines are more common.

Assuming cities continue to follow MDEQ’s guidance, and adopt the revised sampling instructions put out in December that stop instructing people to pre-flush before they draw water samples for testing, we could find cities reporting higher lead levels. 

It’s something we’ll keep an eye on as cities do compliance testing this summer.

Copyright 2021 Michigan Radio. To see more, visit Michigan Radio.