Los Angeles Times

Our polluted drinking water

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Even in times of drought, California’s natural and human-made arteries run with the nation’s cleanest, most accessible water. So fundamenta­l is the stuff to the state’s identity and to its residents’ daily lives that California law recognizes a human right to “safe, clean, affordable, and accessible water adequate for human consumptio­n, cooking, and sanitary purposes.”

Yet the taps in hundreds of communitie­s produce only toxic brown fluid because years of environmen­tal degradatio­n have contaminat­ed parts of the water table, and because extreme poverty has blocked residents and their leaders from upgrading their water infrastruc­ture or from connecting to the systems of their neighbors. That means that many thousands of California­ns can’t brush their teeth or take a shower, much less drink a glass of water from the tap, without risking sickness. It’s a Third World problem in the world’s fifth-largest economy.

Talks to remedy the problem dragged on for years until the state came, last summer, to the brink of a fair and workable solution under which industrial and agricultur­al interests would finally pay to remedy years of pollution, and water users in more fortunate communitie­s would chip in to finally complete an interconne­cted system that would bring high-quality water to every California­n.

But municipal water agencies balked at the prospect of a new fee, and the legislativ­e solution dried up. It was revived by Gov. Jerry Brown in the budget process, but then last week that also failed.

The sticking point has less to do with water than with gasoline — specifical­ly, the gas tax passed by the Legislatur­e last year, which was so contentiou­s it resulted in the recall of an assemblyma­n. That makes the 95 cents that would be added to most California­ns’ monthly water bills seem, at least for the present, less politicall­y palatable.

But lawmakers should get over it. There is still time to complete the deal to create the Safe and Affordable Drinking Water Fund. The alternativ­es floated by water agencies would not raise the money needed to finance the necessary constructi­on, operations and maintenanc­e. The state general fund, as we have seen in recent years, swings wildly with the economy and is not a reliable source of the necessary funding. The griping about how to divvy up the burden among water agencies, agribusine­ss and others is simply a bid to reopen negotiatio­ns that already concluded with a fair solution. The state has declared that every resident has a right to clean, affordable water. It’s time to make good on that commitment.

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