According to the Associated Press, the Erie County Water Authority had 1,453 water main breaks in 2015. There were nearly 400 the same year in Syracuse, where local officials calculated last year that they'll need $726 million to fix 550 miles of pipe. In New York City, an estimated 20 percent of the treated water that enters municipal pipes leaks out before it makes it to a faucet.
However, in New York and over the last 12 months, water quality became a top priority when an industrial chemical PFOA was found to have tainted the tap water of the upstate village of Hoosick Falls, says the AP. Nationwide, EPA says that the cost of replacing, upgrading and expanding sewer and drinking water systems is $1 trillion over 20 years, it adds.
"We've come a long way," said Liz Moran, of the group Environmental Advocates of New York, in the AP story. "But it still falls short."