After major flooding last week and years of infrastructural neglect, 150,000 residents of Jackson, Mississippi have been left without safe drinking water, leaving community groups scrambling to address the crisis.
āWeāre always on alert, and weāre always in the community,ā said Efren NuƱez, an organizer with the Jackson-basedĀ Immigrant Alliance for Justice & Equality, while distributing donations of drinking water in the city. āThey call us right away when thereās an emergency.ā
The Immigrant Alliance for Justice & Equality was founded after theĀ largest single-state immigration enforcement actionĀ in U.S. history led to the detainment of nearly 700 undocumented Mississippi workers in 2019. The group provides vital immigration, labor and health services to the predominantly Black cityās small Latino immigrant community.
But lately, organizers have been focused primarily on getting water to community members, many of whom have struggled to find information and support on the crisis in Spanish.Ā
āTheyāre not doing well, because thereās no water anywhere,ā said NuƱez, who also noted that residents are still struggling with the impact of extreme flooding on their own homes. āThey donāt have water to boil or cook, or bathe. Right now, we only have enough for drinking water. And, the schools are closed, so theyāre also struggling to get to work.ā
Yet, for organizers, the sudden emergency in Jackson has been building up for years, if not decades.
Officials and residents had long been aware of the issues and disruptions plaguing the cityās water treatment facilities, which include chronically low water pressure and dangerous levels of pollution. Yet, officials have been slow to make the necessary fixes in Jackson, which led to an acute crisis after major flooding last weekend disabled the cityās main water plant.
Advocates in the city have largely attributed the slow response to longstanding racial injustice and environmental racism, citing the fact that Jackson is over 82 percent Black ā the result of decades ofĀ white flightĀ that drove out white residents, and deeply crippled the cityās infrastructure. NuƱez also noted that the crisis has been amplified by political conflicts between the Democrat-led city, and the stateās Republican Gov. Tate Reeves.
Other local grassroots groups have also begun distributing water as part of a makeshift mutual aid effort, as residents struggle to cope with the crisis. The Mississippi Rapid Response Coalition, made up of over 30 organizations in the state, has beenĀ distributing bottled waterĀ daily in affected neighborhoods.Ā
āItās been chaos,ā Sarah Stripp, managing director of the Jackson-based nonprofit Springboard to Opportunities, told theĀ Washington Post. āThere has been varying water pressure depending on where folks are in the city. Itās gone up and down in all the communities we work in. Thereās been times it runs clear, times it runs brown.ā
As for NuƱez, who lives in Jackson himself, thereās still access to water in his home. He attributes his luck to his neighborhoodās proximity to Jacksonās wealthier and whiter suburbs, whose water supplies have not been affected by the crisis.Ā
āThey had a similar situation where their treatment plants broke down, but they fixed it right away,ā he said of the suburban water supply. āThatās the thing ā they had the money. Jackson doesnāt have that.ā
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