There are many forms of lead pollution continuing today, that harm large numbers of people. yes, the measures to reduce gasoline lead, and house paint lead, have greatly helped reduce lead pollution across society in general… but there are many other sources of exposure that affect huge numbers of people from other sources. For example: sport fishing with lead sinkers, pollutes the interiors of tackle boxes with fine powder from sinkers rolling around against each other. This particulate contaminates, wet hands, lunches, cooler ice, and caught fish. The contaminated fish go into the frying pan at home to repeatedly dose the family. This never gets investigated because legislators do not want it to be known that this is a great risk to parts of society to fish regularly… the legislatures will not fund any water quality -responsible agencies or public health agencies to investigate such pollution. The state fish and game departments do not want to have to switch their regulations to using alternative (less toxic) ways to weight lines. People suffer because of current fishing sinker use. This is crazy public health policy, directly attributed to legislative failure to deal with it because of NRA and industry lobby pressures. The state fishing regulations that guide families allow and encourage sinker use. None of these sources are given any attention or grant funding to investigate the resultant pollution, and this is never reported to EPA for Clean Water Act or the Clean Drinking water act (as required by law and the 303d process). Children are harmed, largely because lead is an ACCUMULATIVE toxicant. Blood lead testing does NOT indicate the body burden stored in bone (to be released during stress), and a low blood lead result can mask the body burden. Drinking water lead contamination is far more pervasive than just in Flint, or in Portland OR. When we fail to fund limiting sources of lead we are harming those we love… only to save having to put up a small portion of our profit. IMHO