Part F—Additional Requirements To Regulate Safety of Drinking Water
§300j–21. Definitions
As used in this part—
(1) Drinking water cooler
The term "drinking water cooler" means any mechanical device affixed to drinking water supply plumbing which actively cools water for human consumption.
(2) Lead free
The term "lead free" means, with respect to a drinking water cooler, that each part or component of the cooler which may come in contact with drinking water contains not more than 8 percent lead, except that no drinking water cooler which contains any solder, flux, or storage tank interior surface which may come in contact with drinking water shall be considered lead free if the solder, flux, or storage tank interior surface contains more than 0.2 percent lead. The Administrator may establish more stringent requirements for treating any part or component of a drinking water cooler as lead free for purposes of this part whenever he determines that any such part may constitute an important source of lead in drinking water.
(3) Local educational agency
The term "local educational agency" means—
(A) any local educational agency as defined in
(B) the owner of any private, nonprofit elementary or secondary school building, and
(C) the governing authority of any school operating under the defense dependent's education system provided for under the Defense Dependent's Education Act of 1978 (
(4) Repair
The term "repair" means, with respect to a drinking water cooler, to take such corrective action as is necessary to ensure that water cooler is lead free.
(5) Replacement
The term "replacement", when used with respect to a drinking water cooler or drinking water fountain, means the permanent removal of the water cooler or drinking water fountain and the installation of a lead free water cooler or drinking water fountain.
(6) School
The term "school" means any elementary school or secondary school as defined in
(7) Lead-lined tank
The term "lead-lined tank" means a water reservoir container in a drinking water cooler which container is constructed of lead or which has an interior surface which is not lead free.
(July 1, 1944, ch. 373, title XIV, §1461, as added
Editorial Notes
References in Text
The Defense Dependent's Education Act of 1978, referred to in par. (3)(C), probably means the Defense Dependents' Education Act of 1978, title XIV of
Amendments
2018—Par. (5).
2015—Pars. (3)(A), (6).
2002—Pars. (3)(A), (6).
1996—
1994—Par. (3)(A).
Par. (6).
Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries
Effective Date of 2015 Amendment
Amendment by
Effective Date of 2002 Amendment
Amendment by
§300j–22. Recall of drinking water coolers with lead-lined tanks
For purposes of the Consumer Product Safety Act [
(July 1, 1944, ch. 373, title XIV, §1462, as added
Editorial Notes
References in Text
The Consumer Product Safety Act, referred to in text, is
Amendments
1996—
§300j–23. Drinking water coolers containing lead
(a) Publication of lists
The Administrator shall, after notice and opportunity for public comment, identify each brand and model of drinking water cooler which is not lead free, including each brand and model of drinking water cooler which has a lead-lined tank. For purposes of identifying the brand and model of drinking water coolers under this subsection, the Administrator shall use the best information available to the Environmental Protection Agency. Within 100 days after October 31, 1988, the Administrator shall publish a list of each brand and model of drinking water cooler identified under this subsection. Such list shall separately identify each brand and model of cooler which has a lead-lined tank. The Administrator shall continue to gather information regarding lead in drinking water coolers and shall revise and republish the list from time to time as may be appropriate as new information or analysis becomes available regarding lead contamination in drinking water coolers.
(b) Prohibition
No person may sell in interstate commerce, or manufacture for sale in interstate commerce, any drinking water cooler listed under subsection (a) or any other drinking water cooler which is not lead free, including a lead-lined drinking water cooler.
(c) Criminal penalty
Any person who knowingly violates the prohibition contained in subsection (b) shall be imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or fined in accordance with title 18, or both.
(d) Civil penalty
The Administrator may bring a civil action in the appropriate United States District Court (as determined under the provisions of title 28) to impose a civil penalty on any person who violates subsection (b). In any such action the court may impose on such person a civil penalty of not more than $5,000 ($50,000 in the case of a second or subsequent violation).
(July 1, 1944, ch. 373, title XIV, §1463, as added
Editorial Notes
Amendments
1996—
§300j–24. Lead contamination in school drinking water
(a) Distribution of drinking water cooler list
Within 100 days after October 31, 1988, the Administrator shall distribute to the States a list of each brand and model of drinking water cooler identified and listed by the Administrator under
(b) Guidance document and testing protocol
The Administrator shall publish a guidance document and a testing protocol to assist public water systems and schools in determining the source and degree of lead contamination in school drinking water supplies and in remedying such contamination. The guidance document shall include guidelines for sample preservation. The guidance document shall also include guidance to assist States, schools, public water systems, and the general public in ascertaining the levels of lead contamination in drinking water coolers and in taking appropriate action to reduce or eliminate such contamination. The guidance document shall contain a testing protocol for the identification of drinking water coolers which contribute to lead contamination in drinking water. Such document and protocol may be revised, republished and redistributed as the Administrator deems necessary. The Administrator shall distribute the guidance document and testing protocol to the States within 100 days after October 31, 1988.
(c) Dissemination to schools, etc.
Each State shall provide for the dissemination to local educational agencies, private nonprofit elementary or secondary schools and to day care centers of the guidance document and testing protocol published under subsection (b), together with the list of drinking water coolers published under
(d) Voluntary school and child care program lead testing and reduction grant program
(1) Definitions
In this subsection:
(A) Child care program
The term "child care program" has the meaning given the term "early childhood education program" in
(B) Local educational agency
The term "local educational agency" means—
(i) a local educational agency (as defined in
(ii) a tribal education agency (as defined in
(iii) a person that owns or operates a child care program facility.
(2) Establishment
(A) In general
Not later than 180 days after December 16, 2016, the Administrator shall establish a voluntary school and child care program lead testing, compliance monitoring, and lead reduction grant program to make grants available to—
(i) States to assist local educational agencies, public water systems that serve schools and child care programs under the jurisdiction of those local educational agencies, and qualified nonprofit organizations in voluntary testing or compliance monitoring for and remediation of lead contamination in drinking water at schools and child care programs under the jurisdiction of those local educational agencies; and
(ii) tribal consortia to assist tribal education agencies (as defined in
(B) Direct grants to local educational agencies
The Administrator may make a grant for the voluntary testing or compliance monitoring for or remediation of lead contamination described in subparagraph (A) directly available to—
(i) any local educational agency described in clause (i) or (iii) of paragraph (1)(B) located in a State that does not participate in the voluntary grant program established under subparagraph (A);
(ii) any local educational agency described in clause (ii) of paragraph (1)(B);
(iii) any public water system that is located in a State that does not participate in the voluntary grant program established under subparagraph (A) that—
(I) assists schools or child care programs in lead testing;
(II) assists schools or child care programs with compliance monitoring;
(III) assists schools with carrying out projects to remediate lead contamination in drinking water; or
(IV) provides technical assistance to schools or child care programs in carrying out lead testing; or
(iv) a qualified nonprofit organization, as determined by the Administrator.
(C) Technical assistance
In carrying out the grant program under subparagraph (A), beginning not later than 1 year after October 23, 2018, the Administrator shall provide technical assistance to recipients of grants under this subsection—
(i) to assist in identifying the source of lead contamination in drinking water at schools and child care programs under the jurisdiction of the grant recipient;
(ii) to assist in identifying and applying for other Federal and State grant programs that may assist the grant recipient in eliminating lead contamination described in clause (i);
(iii) to provide information on other financing options in eliminating lead contamination described in clause (i); and
(iv) to connect grant recipients with nonprofit and other organizations that may be able to assist with the elimination of lead contamination described in clause (i).
(3) Application
To be eligible to receive a grant under this subsection, a State, local educational agency, public water system, tribal consortium, or qualified nonprofit organization shall submit to the Administrator an application at such time, in such manner, and containing such information as the Administrator may require.
(4) Priority
In making grants under this subsection, the Administrator shall give priority to States, local educational agencies, public water systems, tribal consortia, and qualified nonprofit organizations that will assist in voluntary testing for or the remediation of lead contamination in drinking water at schools and child care programs that are in low-income areas.
(5) Limitation on use of funds
Not more than 4 percent of grant funds accepted by a State, local educational agency, public water system, tribal consortium, or qualified nonprofit organization for a fiscal year under this subsection shall be used to pay the administrative costs of carrying out this subsection.
(6) Guidance; public availability
As a condition of receiving a grant under this subsection, the recipient State, local educational agency, public water system, tribal consortium, or qualified nonprofit organization shall ensure that each local educational agency, public water system, tribal consortium, or qualified nonprofit organization to which grant funds are distributed shall—
(A) expend grant funds in accordance with—
(i) the guidance of the Environmental Protection Agency entitled "3Ts for Reducing Lead in Drinking Water in Schools: Revised Technical Guidance" and dated October 2006 (or any successor guidance); or
(ii) applicable State or tribal regulations or guidance regarding voluntary testing or compliance monitoring for and remediation of lead contamination in drinking water in schools and child care programs that are not less stringent than the guidance referred to in clause (i); and
(B)(i) make available, if applicable, in the administrative offices and, to the extent practicable, on the Internet website of the applicable local educational agency for inspection by the public (including teachers, other school personnel, and parents) a copy of the results of any voluntary testing for lead contamination in school and child care program drinking water carried out using grant funds under this subsection; and
(ii) notify parent, teacher, and employee organizations of the availability of the results described in clause (i).
(7) Maintenance of effort
If resources are available to a State, local educational agency, public water system, tribal consortium, or qualified nonprofit organization from any other Federal agency, a State, or a private foundation for testing or compliance monitoring for or remediation of lead contamination in drinking water, the State, local educational agency, public water system, tribal consortium, or qualified nonprofit organization shall demonstrate that the funds provided under this subsection will not displace those resources.
(8) Authorization of appropriations
There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this subsection—
(A) $30,000,000 for fiscal year 2022;
(B) $35,000,000 for fiscal year 2023;
(C) $40,000,000 for fiscal year 2024;
(D) $45,000,000 for fiscal year 2025; and
(E) $50,000,000 for fiscal year 2026.
(July 1, 1944, ch. 373, title XIV, §1464, as added
Editorial Notes
Amendments
2021—Subsec. (b).
Subsec. (d).
Subsec. (d)(2)(A).
Subsec. (d)(2)(B).
Subsec. (d)(2)(B)(iii), (iv).
Subsec. (d)(3).
Subsec. (d)(4).
Subsec. (d)(5).
Subsec. (d)(6).
Subsec. (d)(6)(A)(ii).
Subsec. (d)(6)(B)(i).
Subsec. (d)(7).
Subsec. (d)(8).
2018—Subsec. (d)(2)(C).
Subsec. (d)(4) to (7).
Subsec. (d)(8).
2016—Subsec. (d).
1996—
§300j–25. Drinking water fountain replacement for schools
(a) Establishment
Not later than 1 year after October 23, 2018, the Administrator shall establish a grant program to provide assistance to local educational agencies for the replacement of drinking water fountains manufactured prior to 1988.
(b) Use of funds
Funds awarded under the grant program—
(1) shall be used to pay the costs of replacement of drinking water fountains in schools; and
(2) may be used to pay the costs of monitoring and reporting of lead levels in the drinking water of schools of a local educational agency receiving such funds, as determined appropriate by the Administrator.
(c) Priority
In awarding funds under the grant program, the Administrator shall give priority to local educational agencies based on economic need.
(d) Authorization of appropriations
There are authorized to be appropriated to carry out this section $5,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2019 through 2021.
(July 1, 1944, ch. 373, title XIV, §1465, as added
Editorial Notes
Prior Provisions
A prior section 300j–25, act July 1, 1944, ch. 373, title XIV, §1465, as added
§300j–26. Certification of testing laboratories
The Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency shall assure that programs for the certification of testing laboratories which test drinking water supplies for lead contamination certify only those laboratories which provide reliable accurate testing. The Administrator (or the State in the case of a State to which certification authority is delegated under this subsection) shall publish and make available to the public upon request the list of laboratories certified under this subsection.1
(
Editorial Notes
Codification
Section was enacted as part of the Lead Contamination Control Act of 1988, and not as part of the Public Health Service Act which comprises this chapter.
1 So in original. Probably should be "section."
§300j–27. Registry for lead exposure and Advisory Committee
(a) Definitions
In this section:
(1) City
The term "City" means a city exposed to lead contamination in the local drinking water system.
(2) Committee
The term "Committee" means the Advisory Committee established under subsection (c).
(3) Secretary
The term "Secretary" means the Secretary of Health and Human Services.
(b) Lead exposure registry
The Secretary shall establish within the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention at the discretion of the Secretary, or establish through a grant award or contract, a lead exposure registry to collect data on the lead exposure of residents of a City on a voluntary basis.
(c) Advisory Committee
(1) Membership
(A) In general
The Secretary shall establish, within the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry an Advisory Committee in coordination with the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other relevant agencies as determined by the Secretary consisting of Federal members and non-Federal members, and which shall include—
(i) an epidemiologist;
(ii) a toxicologist;
(iii) a mental health professional;
(iv) a pediatrician;
(v) an early childhood education expert;
(vi) a special education expert;
(vii) a dietician; and
(viii) an environmental health expert.
(B) Requirements
Membership in the Committee shall not exceed 15 members and not less than ½ of the members shall be Federal members.
(2) Chair
The Secretary shall designate a chair from among the Federal members appointed to the Committee.
(3) Terms
Members of the Committee shall serve for a term of not more than 3 years and the Secretary may reappoint members for consecutive terms.
(4) Application of FACA
The Committee shall be subject to the Federal Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.).1
(5) Responsibilities
The Committee shall, at a minimum—
(A) review the Federal programs and services available to individuals and communities exposed to lead;
(B) review current research on lead poisoning to identify additional research needs;
(C) review and identify best practices, or the need for best practices, regarding lead screening and the prevention of lead poisoning;
(D) identify effective services, including services relating to healthcare, education, and nutrition for individuals and communities affected by lead exposure and lead poisoning, including in consultation with, as appropriate, the lead exposure registry as established in subsection (b); and
(E) undertake any other review or activities that the Secretary determines to be appropriate.
(6) Report
Annually for 5 years and thereafter as determined necessary by the Secretary or as required by Congress, the Committee shall submit to the Secretary, the Committees on Finance, Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, and Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry of the Senate and the Committees on Education and the Workforce, Energy and Commerce, and Agriculture of the House of Representatives a report that includes—
(A) an evaluation of the effectiveness of the Federal programs and services available to individuals and communities exposed to lead;
(B) an evaluation of additional lead poisoning research needs;
(C) an assessment of any effective screening methods or best practices used or developed to prevent or screen for lead poisoning;
(D) input and recommendations for improved access to effective services relating to health care, education, or nutrition for individuals and communities impacted by lead exposure; and
(E) any other recommendations for communities affected by lead exposure, as appropriate.
(d) Authorization of appropriations
There are authorized to be appropriated for the period of fiscal years 2017 through 2021—
(1) $17,500,000 to carry out subsection (b); and
(2) $2,500,000 to carry out subsection (c).
(
Editorial Notes
References in Text
The Federal Advisory Committee Act, referred to in subsec. (c)(4), is
Codification
Section was enacted as part of the Water and Waste Act of 2016, and also as part of the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act, also known as the WIIN Act, and not as part of the Public Health Service Act which comprises this chapter.