From: Razer <[email protected]>

 
 On 12/29/2016 01:16 PM, jim bell wrote:
  
>>You are trying to mislead by using this article.  It doesn't even explain 
>>from where the lead comes.  
 
>Maybe they don't KNOW where the lead comes from. Does that mean it isn't 
>newsworthy?
You are trying to connect this lead with wafer fabs.  That is the misleading 
part.  
Lead in drinking water is potentially a problem, but often it doesn't come from 
the actual source of the water.  Until relatively recently, plumbers used 
lead/tin solder to connect pipes.   According to   
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipe_(fluid_conveyance)#Materials   " In the US 
it's estimated that 6.5 million lead pipes installed before the 1930s are still 
in use."×   

 'Soft water' (water without a lot of mineral content) tends to be corrosive to 
such joints.   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plumbosolvency     
One example of incompetents dealing with the problem of lead in water is:  
http://www.oregonlive.com/education/index.ssf/2016/07/lead_in_portland_school_water.html
     Don't forget that Oregon, and especially Portland, is famously liberal.
        Jim Bell
From:    http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/04/us/flint-water-crisis-fast-facts/     ×  
 

"According to a class-action lawsuit, the state Department of Environmental 
Quality was not treating the Flint River water with an anti-corrosive agent, in 
violation of federal law. The river water was found to be 19 times more 
corrosive than water from Detroit, which was from Lake Huron, according to a 
study by Virginia Tech.""Since the water wasn't properly treated, lead from 
aging service lines to homes began leaching into the Flint water supply after 
the city tapped into the Flint River as its main water source."

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