In the summer of 2022, heavy rainfall damaged a water treatment plant in the city of Jackson, Mississippi, precipitating a high-profile public health crisis. The Republican Governor Tate ReevesĀ declared a state of emergency, as thousands of residents were told to boil their water before drinking it. For some, the pressure in their taps was so low that they couldnāt flush their toilets and were forced to rely on bottled water for weeks.Ā
Many of the cityās 150,000 residents were wary that their local government could get clean water running through their pipes again. State officials had a history of undermining efforts to repair Jacksonās beleaguered infrastructure, and the city council, for its part, didnāt have the money to make the fixes on its own. So when the federal government stepped in that fall, allocating funding and appointing an engineer to manage the cityās water system, there was reason to believe change may finally be near.Ā
But as the months wore on, hope turned to frustration. The federally appointed engineer, Ted Henifin, began taking steps to run the cityās water system through a private company, despite Mayor Chokwe Lumumbaās objections. Advocatesā repeated requests for data and other information about Jacksonās drinking water went unanswered, according to a local activist, Makani Themba, and despite Henifinās assurances before a federal judge that the water was safe to drink, brown liquid still poured out of some taps. Faced with these conditions, a group of advocates sent the Environmental Protection Agency a letter last July asking to be involved in the overhaul of the cityās water system.Ā
āJackson residents have weathered many storms, literally and figuratively, over the last several years,ā they wroteĀ in the letter. āWe have a right and responsibility to be fully engaged in the redevelopment of our water and sewer system.ā The letter was followed byĀ an emergency petitionĀ to the EPA containing similar requests for transparency and involvement.Ā
Earlier this month, a federal judgeĀ grantedĀ the advocates their request, making two community organizations, the Mississippi Poor Peopleās Campaign and the Peopleās Advocacy Group, parties to an EPA lawsuit against the city of Jackson for violating the Safe Drinking Water Act. A seat at the table of the legal proceedings, the advocates hope, will allow the cityās residents to have a say in rebuilding their infrastructure and also ward off privatization. The saga in Jackson reflects a wider problem affecting public utilities across the country, with cash-strapped local governments turning to corporations to make badly needed repairs to water treatment plants, distribution pipes, and storage systems, a course that often limits transparency and boxes locals out of the decision-making.Ā
āThis isnāt a uniquely Jackson problem,ā said Brooke Floyd, co-director of the Jackson Peopleās Assembly at the Peopleās Advocacy Institute. āWe need ways for all these cities that need infrastructure repairs to get clean water to their communities.ā
The roots of Jacksonās water crisis lie in decades of disinvestment and neglect. Like many other midsize cities around the country, such as Pittsburgh and St. Louis, Jackson declined after white, middle-class residents relocated to the suburbs, taking tax dollars away from infrastructure in increasing need of repair. Between 1980 and 2020, Jacksonās population dropped by around 25 percent. Today, the city is more than 80 percent Black, up from 50 percent in the 1980s. A quarter of Jacksonās residents live below the poverty line, with most households earning less than $40,000 a year, compared with $49,000 for the state overall.
Over the decades, antagonism between the Republican state government and the Democratic and Black-led local government created additional obstacles to updating Jacksonās water and sewage infrastructure. AĀ Title VI civil rights complaintĀ that the NAACP filed with the EPA in September 2022 accused Governor Reeves and the state legislature of āsystematically depriving Jackson the funds that it needs to operate and maintain its water facilities in a safe and reliable manner.ā The biggest problem, the NAACP argued, was that the state had rejected the cityās proposal for a 1 percent sales tax to pay for infrastructure updates and by directing funds from the EPAās Drinking Water State Revolving Loan Fund away from the capital city.Ā
āDespite Jacksonās status as the most populous city in Mississippi, state agencies awarded federal fundsā from the EPA program three times in the past 25 years, the complaint read. āMeanwhile, the state has funneled funds to majority-white areas in Mississippi despite their less acute needs.ā
In the absence of adequate resources from the state and local government, Jacksonians have learned to fend for themselves, Floyd told Grist. At the height of the water crisis in 2022, federal dollars helped fund the distribution of bottled water to thousands of residents, but when the money dried up, people organized to secure drinking water for households still reckoning with smelly, off-color fluid running from their taps. When Henifin began posting boil-water notices on a smartphone app that some found hard to use, one resident set up a separate community text service. Floyd said that for some residents, these problems are still ongoing today.Ā
āThereās this sense of, we have to provide for each other because no one is coming,ā Floyd said. āWe know that the state is not going to help us.ā
Henifin has told a federal judge that heās made a number of moves to improve Jacksonās water quality. The private company that he set up, JXN Water, has hired contractors to update the main water plantās corrosion control and conducted testing for lead and bacteria like E. coli. But residents and advocates point out that while the water coming out of the system might be clean, the city hosts more than 150 miles of decrepit pipes that can leach toxic chemicals into the water supply. Advocates want the city to replace them and conduct testing in neighborhoods instead of just near the treatment facility, changes that the city has federal money to make. In December 2022, the federal governmentĀ allocated $600 millionĀ to Jackson for repairs to its water system.
But the worry is that this money will be spent on other things. Henifin is the one who handles the federal funds. By court order, he has the authority to enter into contracts, make payments, and change the rates and fees charged to consumers.Ā
Themba, the local activist, said that Henifin has not responded to residentsā demands for additional testing and access to monitoring data that already exists. Because JXN Water is a private company, itās not subject to public disclosure laws requiring this information to be shared with the public. (Henifin did not respond to Gristās requests for comment.)Ā
Themba points to Pittsburgh as an example of a place where residents fought privatization of their water system and secured a more democratic public utility. In 2012, faced with a lack of state and federal funding, the city turned over its water system to Veolia, an international waste- and water-management giant based in France. Over the following years, the publicly traded companyĀ elected for cost-cutting measures thatĀ caused lead to enter the water supplyĀ of tens of thousands of residents. A local campaign ensued, and advocates eventually won a commitment from the city government to return the water system to city control and give theĀ public a voice in the systemās management.
āWhat weāve learned from all over the country is that privatization doesnāt work for the community,ā Themba said. āWe want what works.ā
The court order that designated Henifin as Jacksonās water manager in 2022 does not outline what will happen once his four-year contract expires in 2026. Last month, the Mississippi SenateĀ passed a billĀ that would put Jacksonās water in the hands of the state after Henifin steps down, a move that the manager recently said he supports and that Jacksonās mayor strongly opposes. That bill soon failed in the HouseĀ without a vote. Now that they are part of the lawsuit, advocates hope theyāll have a chance to influence the outcome, before itās too late.Ā
āJackson residents have felt left out of the equation for so long,ā Floyd said. āIf we lose this, thatās a big deal.ā
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