The Pak Banker

Closing water access gap

-

America is facing two water crises. One is well-known: since the poisoning of Flint, Mich., erupted in headlines in 2015, we have learned how crumbling infrastruc­ture, disinvestm­ent, neglect and official callousnes­s has left unsafe tainted water spilling from taps in Newark, N.J., East Chicago, Ind., and Compton, Calif., to name only a few cities affected.

Yet there is another, hidden water crisis that has mostly escaped notice - the plight of some 2 million Americans who lack any access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.

Well into the 21st century, they continue to live without dependable hot and cold running water or flush toilets. Altogether, the number of vulnerable people who have fallen into this "water-access gap" is equal to the combined population­s of Atlanta, Boston and Washington, DC. Perhaps most shockingly, that number seems to be growing.

As a first step toward eliminatin­g water poverty in America, DigDeep, together with the US Water Alliance, an industry group, recently completed the first comprehens­ive national study of the water-access gap. Over two years, our team, joined by researcher­s from Michigan State University, analyzed all available federal data and fanned out across the U.S. to examine conditions in six communitie­s representa­tive of the challenges faced nationwide: California's Central Valley; colonias along the Texas border; the "Black Belt" of rural Mississipp­i and

Alabama; Appalachia­n West Virginia; Native American reservatio­ns in the Four Corners region of the Southwest; and Puerto Rico.

"At least 2 million Americans live without reliable access to hot and cold running water and working flush toilets. Among these are the 4 million Americans in homes without "complete plumbing," defined by Census as hot and cold running water, a tap, shower or bath, and, until recently, a toilet. In 2014, at the time of the last complete data set, Alaska had the highest population concentrat­ion without access (5.75 percent), followed by New Mexico (1.6 percent), and Maine and Arizona (1.0 percent).

"Race is the strongest predictor of water and sanitation access. African American and Latinx households are nearly twice as likely to lack complete plumbing than white households; Native American households are 19 times more likely. Our qualitativ­e research found that contempora­ry water-access problems are often the by-products of structural racism including redlining - the deliberate exclusion of some neighborho­ods from access to basic services - and deliberate disinvestm­ent.

"Federal data doesn't accurately measure the problem. The Census Bureau's American Community Survey remains one of the only proxies by which to measure this problem, but the Census tends to undercount vulnerable communitie­s, the questionna­ire leaves out wastewater issues, and collection methods have been inconsiste­nt. The Census in the middle of a four-year collection period, fragmentin­g the existing data and making it impossible to track forward progress against historical trends.

"At the same time, overall progress on water access is slowing as the federal government has for water infrastruc­ture. In 1977, 63 percent of total capital spending for water and wastewater systems came from federal agencies; today that number is less than 9 percent. Most of those funds are now locked up in loans, meaning that communitie­s that missed out on federal infrastruc­ture grants must take on debt in order to catch up with the rest of the country.

"Some states show evidence of backslidin­g. In Delaware, Idaho, Kansas, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota and Puerto Rico, the number of people living without complete plumbing recently increased.

This problem is not isolated to a few families "living off the grid," but is the result of historical and geographic­al factors that have left entire communitie­s without basic services. The stories of human hardship we encountere­d in our research were staggering. On the Navajo Nation, families drive for hours to haul barrels of water to meet their basic needs. In West Virginia, they drink from polluted streams. In Alabama, tropical diseases once thought to have been eradicated are resurfacin­g. Families in Texas border towns worry because there is no running water to fight fires.

What can be done to ensure that all Americans have access to running water and basic sanitation?

First, the government must begin accurately measuring the water access gap. One of the simplest recommenda­tions in our report is for the Census to revamp its questions on complete plumbing access to once again include toilets, and add questions on wastewater services, water quality and cost. After all, you can't manage what you don't measure.

 ??  ?? The National Bureau of Economic Research put out an analysis of large multinatio­nal retailers which found them mostly bearing the costs of the duties themselves rather than passing costs on to customers. This helps explain why we have not seen the effects of the tariffs in the consumer
price index.
The National Bureau of Economic Research put out an analysis of large multinatio­nal retailers which found them mostly bearing the costs of the duties themselves rather than passing costs on to customers. This helps explain why we have not seen the effects of the tariffs in the consumer price index.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan