You mention the Big Berkey, but I think you are referring to the Berkey light . This is the Berkey product that uses Lexan. All the others(including the Big berkey) are stainless steel. And you spelled Berkey wrong throughout the article.
I stay away from bottled water for the reasons you mention exactly. However, I was under the impression that the leeching of Bisphnol-A only occurs during heat. The major argument against bottled was not just that they use plastic bottles, it's that while in transport, warehouses, or the store shelves, the continous heating and cooling of the plastic causes the leeching phenomenon.
If this is in fact the case, and this is what the studies are saying, then unless the berkey light is being exposed to heat, then this shouldn't be an issue. The link above even states that the Berkey Light does not leech plasticizers, which is what Bisphenol-A is. I verfied this with the Berkey manufacturers site, and it's the same statement. However, if leeching does occur, I'd be interested to know more about the time it takes to leech into the water. Can it happen over a couple days to a week with no high temperatures involved. I haven't seen one study pointing to that. But to clarify your point, if folks are concerned with this, they can just go ahead an buy the Big Berkey - the stainless steel model.