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| Photo Credit:AP. |
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi’s capital city is struggling with the near collapse of its water system, prompting emergency declarations from President Joe Biden and Gov. Tate Reeves.
Jackson has
dangerously low water pressure this week, and many of the city’s 150,000
residents have been without water flowing from their faucets.
Problems
started days after torrential rain fell in central Mississippi, altering the
quality of the raw water entering Jackson’s treatment plants. That slowed the
treatment process, depleted supplies in water tanks and caused a precipitous
drop in pressure.
When water
pressure drops, there’s a possibility that untreated groundwater can enter the
water system through cracked pipes, so customers are told to boil water to kill
potentially harmful bacteria.
But even
before the rainfall, officials said some water pumps had failed and a treatment
plant was using backup pumps. Jackson had already been under a boil-water
notice for a month because the state health department had found cloudy water
that could make people ill.
WHAT IS THE
HISTORY OF WATER PROBLEMS IN JACKSON?
Jackson is
the largest city in one of the poorest states in the U.S.
The city has
a shrinking tax base that resulted from white flight, which began about a
decade after public schools were integrated in 1970. Jackson’s population is
more than 80% Black, and about 25% of its residents live in poverty.
Like many
American cities, Jackson struggles with aging infrastructure with water lines
that crack or collapse. Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, a Democrat in a
Republican-led state, said the city’s water problems come from decades of
deferred maintenance.
Some
equipment froze at Jackson’s main water treatment plant during a cold snap in
early 2020, leaving thousands of customers with dangerously low water pressure
or no water at all. The National Guard helped distribute drinking water. People
gathered water in buckets to flush toilets. Similar problems happened on a
smaller scale earlier this year.
Jackson
frequently has boil-water notices because of loss of pressure or other problems
that can contaminate the water. Some of the mandates are in place for only a
few days, while others last weeks. Some only affect specific neighborhoods,
usually because of broken pipes in the area. Others affect all customers on the
water system.
The state
health department put the entire Jackson water system under a boil-water notice
in late July because of a cloudy quality to the water. That mandate remains in
effect, and officials have not indicated when it might end. Although boiling
the water is intended to protect people’s health, it also makes everyday tasks
more time consuming.
Most of
Jackson’s water comes from the Ross Barnett Reservoir, which is just northeast
of the city and is fed by the Pearl River. The city also takes some water from
a well. In addition, hospitals and some state agencies have drilled their own
wells to have water available in case of problems with the city system.
The water
system serves about 150,000 residents in Jackson and about 11,500 residents of
a suburb, Byram, plus businesses and government offices. About 80% of customers
had little or no water Wednesday morning at the worst part of the current
outage, and all customers had low pressure, a Jackson city spokeswoman said.
Jackson has
two water treatment plants. The newer and larger one is the O.B. Curtis plant
near the reservoir. This plant has been the main source of the most recent
problems. The governor said two pumps at Curtis stopped operating within the
past month, so the plant had been operating on backup pumps. A temporary pump
was installed Wednesday.
The Curtis
plant is authorized to produce up to 50 million gallons (189,271 kiloliters) of
water per day. According to the governor’s office, it was producing 20 million
gallons (75,708 kiloliters) Thursday. The older water treatment plant, J.H.
Fewell, is authorized to produce 20 million gallons (75,708 kiloliters) of
water per day, with the flexibility to go up to 30 million gallons (113,562
kiloliters). On Thursday, it was producing 20.5 million gallons (77,601
kiloliters).
Understaffing
is a serious problem.
The mayor
said the city has had difficulty finding and hiring enough Class A certified
water operators. Federal law requires at least one such operator to be on duty
at each water treatment plant at all times.
WLBT-TV
requested emails from the city and found that the Curtis plant had one-sixth of
the number of certified operators it needed to be fully staffed. The city
engineer said in November that staff shortages were so severe that the city
would have to shut down one of its plants if one more operator left. The
documents also showed that operators were working massive amounts of overtime.
WHAT ABOUT
WATER QUALITY?
The
Environmental Protection Agency issued a notice in January that Jackson’s
system violates the federal Safe Drinking Water Act. The EPA noted that an
April 2021 fire in the electrical panel at Curtis had caused all five pumps to be
unavailable for service, causing low water pressure. An inspection six months
later found the pumps remained out of service.
In 2015,
routine testing found higher than acceptable lead levels in Jackson water
samples, and the city continues to publish public notices about water quality
not meeting minimum standards.
In 2016, the
state Health Department found an inadequate application of water treatment
chemicals because of a failing corrosion control system at the Curtis plant.
The EPA required the city to correct this problem. In 2017, the city began
installation of corrosion control treatment.
WHAT OTHER
WATER PROBLEMS DOES JACKSON HAVE?
Jackson has also
struggled with wastewater.
In 2012, the
city entered into a consent decree with the EPA and the U.S. Department of
Justice to bring its sewer system into compliance with federal water quality
laws. The city remains out of compliance.
In late
April, the city submitted a report to federal regulators showing that sewer
failures caused the release of nearly 45 million gallons (170,344 kiloliters)
of untreated wastewater into the environment between December and March.
WHAT WILL IT
COST TO FIX JACKSON’S WATER PROBLEMS?
The mayor
said fixing Jackson’s water system could cost billions of dollars, and that is
far beyond what the city can afford.
An
infrastructure bill that Biden signed into law last year is designed to address
problems like Jackson’s, but it’s unclear how much money the Mississippi
capital will receive.
The
Mississippi Legislature this year allocated $3 million for repairs at Jackson’s
Fewell water plant. The Legislature also put $400 million of federal pandemic
relief money into a water infrastructure fund, and Jackson could apply for part
of that. Cities or counties are required to match the grant money with local
money. The application period opened Thursday.
