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Plumbing News
U.S. Congressman Introduces
IAPMO Supported Plumbing Research Investment Legislation.
U.S. Rep. Matt Cartwright
(D-Penn.) on Friday introduced legislation intended to promote
federal investment in research to ensure the data used in the
development of U.S. plumbing standards reflects the 21st century’s
more water efficient technologies. IAPMO, developer of the American
National Standard-designated Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC®), is an
enthusiastic advocate for this legislation and the updated data it
would provide.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Plumbing
Research Act of 2016 (H.R. 6424) would direct the NIST to
reconstitute its plumbing research laboratory, identifying
mismatches between old data and newer, water-efficient products that
undermine from an infrastructural standpoint the conservation such
products are intended to provide. For many decades, NIST ran a
plumbing laboratory, but due to budgetary
constraints it was disbanded in the early 1980s.
“American consumers today reap the benefits of state-of-the-art
water fixtures and appliances, such as watersaving shower heads and
efficient washing machines,” Rep. Cartwright said. “However, the
plumbing that carries water to these fixtures and appliances has not
kept pace. In fact, the research and data which are the basis for
U.S. plumbing structure, design, and construction standards have
barely changed since they were developed in the early 20th century.
As a result, even newly built plumbing systems are often inefficient
and inappropriate for current plumbing fixtures and appliances.” Story continues below
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The proposed legislation
furthermore addresses the health risks associated with
potentially faulty data, including the threat of Legionella
bacteria, which is responsible for Legionnaires’ disease,
and sewer backups that can result from inadequate water flow
through pipes sized inadequately to sufficiently transport
solids. “It has been nearly 40 years since the federal
government had a concerted and centralized effort providing
research into our nation's plumbing systems,” said Dain
Hansen, IAPMO’s Senior Vice President of Government
Relations. “With water issues abounding, and only expected
to increase in the future, this legislation aims to fill the
gaping void in federal research to address the vital issues
surrounding premise plumbing.”
Founded in 1926, IAPMO’s UPC governs the installation and
maintenance of commercial and residential plumbing systems
worldwide, its provisions protecting more than half the
Earth’s population. Its 2017 Water Efficiency and Sanitation
Standard (WESStand) draws upon IAPMO’s core competency and
industry expertise in plumbing systems for the purpose of
providing comprehensive requirements to optimize water use
practices
attributed to the built environment while maintaining
protection of the public health, safety and welfare.
A copy of the introduced bill can
be found here:
www.goo.gl/gUcWh6.
For more information on the legislation, contact Hansen at (202)
445-7514 or dain.hansen@iapmo.org.
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