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Customer Type <br />Meter ID <br />Tax Parcel Identification Number (PIN) <br />Home Year Built <br />Residential, Commercial, Industrial Customer <br />Types <br />All customer type SLs have to be inventoried <br />but PWS might want to narrow in on <br />residential first <br />Commercial and industrial user SLs are <br />typically larger and pump a lot of water <br />through. Lead is not ideal for larger pipes, <br />lead is better for smaller pipes because of <br />malleability. Can help prioritize. If the pipe is > <br />2 inches, then they likely do not have lead <br />Provides a unique identifier to support data <br />merge <br />Right now we cannot use home built date as <br />a justification for classifying materials type. <br />As -built year can be used as a cross <br />comparison point. <br />You can cross check as -built with home built <br />date from the tax parcel data BUT it does not <br />count/ is not accepted as proof from the EPA <br />(unknown really if they will accept it/not clear <br />right now) that an LSL doesn't exist. <br />One example for where As Builts will be <br />helpful is for neighborhoods <br />established/constructed dates. If we can <br />prove if a neighborhood was built after the <br />state's lead ban date, then EPA is fine with <br />that as proof. <br />Lot Size <br />Smaller lot is more likely to be associated <br />with higher levels of lead, correlation with <br />assessed value <br />Property Type <br />Fallback if we do not get this data on <br />Residential, Commercial, and Industrial from <br />the client <br />Latitude/longitude <br />Location identifier (If client cannot provide this <br />data) <br />Street Address <br />Location identifier (If client cannot provide this <br />