Albuquerque Journal

Report: Window opens to clean water for tribes

Federal funding amid virus may offer chance

- Copyright © 2021 Albuquerqu­e Journal BY THERESA DAVIS

The Hopi Tribe in Arizona faces a water supply contaminat­ed with arsenic.

The Jicarilla Apache Nation in New Mexico lacks funds to maintain its water infrastruc­ture.

And Navajo residents continue to haul water miles to their homes.

But the COVID-19 pandemic and federal funding packages have opened a window to provide clean water for 30 Indigenous tribes in the Colorado River Basin, according to a new report from the Water and Tribes Initiative.

Bridging the tribal water access gap is the federal government’s responsibi­lity, said Heather Tanana, lead report author, Navajo water lawyer and assistant law professor at the University of Utah.

“A promise the federal government made when it establishe­d reservatio­ns for tribes is that it did so to provide permanent homeland,” Tanana said. “You cannot have a permanent homeland unless you have water.”

The report outlines four challenges for tribal water security: piped water access, inadequate water quality, failing infrastruc­ture, and limited funds for operation and maintenanc­e.

A host of federal agencies — the Indian Health Service, the Bureau of Reclamatio­n, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the Department of Agricultur­e — tackle tribal water projects in the Colorado River Basin.

The report recommends a “whole-of-government” approach to coordinate work and funding across agencies.

“Big infrastruc­ture projects cost a lot of money and an individual agency is going to be severely limited in trying to be comprehens­ive,” Tanana said.

The COVID-19 pandemic has also shone a stark light on tribal water issues.

Native households are more likely to lack piped water than any other racial group, according to the U.S.

Water Alliance.

Reservatio­ns with limited water access, such as the Navajo Nation and White Mountain Apache, have experience­d virus infection rates at up to triple the national rate.

Bidtah Becker, a Navajo citizen with the Water and Tribes Initiative, said the CARES Act and American Rescue Plan are meaningful investment­s in tribal water security.

“Providing funds to both federal agencies and to tribes directly, that’s an important shift,” said Becker, who is also a Navajo Tribal Utility Authority attorney and New Mexico Interstate Stream Commission­er. “Tribes may, and often can, get funding … to people on the ground.”

The report recommends that the Biden administra­tion engage in meaningful tribal consultati­on to help each Colorado River Basin tribe build and maintain resilient water systems.

“When Congress created IHS and its sanitation deficiency program, it authorized IHS to support the cost of operations and maintenanc­e, but never funded it,” Becker said. “Water is life. A lack of water is a social issue, an economic issue and a public health issue.”

 ??  ?? Heather Tanana
Heather Tanana
 ??  ?? Bidtah Becker
Bidtah Becker

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