RI Offering Free Lead Testing In Faucets, Fountains At Daycares | Narragansett, RI Patch
KINGSTON, RI — The Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) and the University of Rhode Island (URI) have teamed up to test drinking water for lead for free in schools and licensed child care facilities.
As part of an ongoing effort to identify and address sources of possible childhood lead poisoning, the RIDOH officials have urged licensed child care facilities to sign up to have their drinking water tested for lead. The testing is free and is offered by a cooperative effort of RIDOH and the URI Cooperative Extension Water Quality Program.
Child care facilities are required to test their drinking water upon initial licensure or when there are significant changes to the plumbing, but historically, that testing has been at the owner’s expense.
"Lead is poisonous and can impact a child’s ability to learn and succeed in school," RIDOH Director of Health Jerome Larkin said. "No Rhode Islander should have to worry if the water their child is drinking at school or child care facility is safe. With our partners at URI, we have already tested the drinking water at more than half of Rhode Island’s public schools to see if onsite plumbing could be exposing students and staff to lead. We are pleased to be able to offer this same opportunity to licensed child care facilities."
Participating child care facilities select up to 10 drinking water faucets and fountains, including bottle filling stations, for testing. URI collects the samples, and the samples are tested at RIDOH labs.
RIDOH officials said they have some limited federal funding that may help schools and child care facilities subsidize the costs of replacing eligible faucets and fountains. State health officials said they will also provide child care facilities that detected any lead with suggested actions to lower lead levels.
Child care facilities that follow any of RIDOH’s recommended actions will be able to re-test their drinking water, for free, to confirm lead levels were lowered.
Lead is a poisonous metal. As plumbing gets old, lead can get into the water when metal wears away in pipes, lead-based solder, or brass fittings on faucets or water fountains. There is no safe level of lead in drinking water. Children with high blood lead levels can experience lifelong health problems, such as learning disabilities, loss of IQ, and reduced attention span. The effects are most serious for children younger than six.
"The only way to know if there is lead in drinking water is to test for it," RI Department of Human Services Director Kimberly Merolla-Brito said. "With this information, child care facilities are able to take the needed steps to lower lead levels and safeguard the health of children and staff. While child care centers are already testing, this provides an opportunity for them to do it at no charge. I would encourage these facilities in the state to take advantage of this important opportunity.
Results of testing in public schools
Since 2023, RIDOH and URI have tested water at 148 public schools, representing the drinking water for more than 60,000 students. At the schools, 1,022 drinking water faucets and fountains were tested, state officials said.
Lead is measured in drinking water in parts per billion (ppb). Higher levels of lead (higher than 10 ppb) are more concerning. State health officials said nearly 80 percent of drinking water faucets and fountains tested did not detect any lead.
High levels of lead in school drinking water were rare. Less than 4 percent of sampled drinking water faucets and fountains had higher than 10 ppb of lead.
Although only 20 percent of all the faucets and drinking fountains tested detected lead, nearly 70 percent of schools tested detected lead in at least one drinking water faucet or fountain, RIDOH officials said.
Have a news tip? Email [email protected].
Jimmy BentleyResults of testing in public schools