Albany Times Union

Improving water pressure could break Jackson’s pipes

Addressing fallout of flooding complicate­d by aging system, politics

- By Emily Wagster Pettus and Kevin Mcgill

JACKSON, Miss. — Water pressure continued to improve in Mississipp­i’s capital city Friday as repairs continued at a long-troubled water plant, but some in the city of 150,000 still had little or no water flowing from taps, officials said.

And there was a new concern: Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba said success in increasing the water pressure could strain the city’s aging water pipes.

“That could lead to rupturing of pipes across the city,” Lumumba said during a news conference with Federal Emergency Management Agency officials and White House infrastruc­ture coordinato­r Mitch Landrieu.

Torrential rains last week followed by flooding of the Pearl River exacerbate­d problems at the O.B. Curtis treatment plant, leading to a drop in pressure throughout Jackson, where residents were already under a boil-water order due to poor water quality.

“More areas throughout Jackson now have some pressure,” the city said in a news release Friday. “Many are now experienci­ng normal pressure. Areas further from the plant and at higher elevations may still be experienci­ng low to no pressure.”

Seven major distributi­on sites for drinking water were announced Thursday, augmenting smaller efforts around town.

At Golden Key Apartments, a complex for senior citizens and people with disabiliti­es, resident Mary Gaines, 64, helped coordinate water distributi­on Thursday.

“It’s a very nice place to live. We just ain’t got no water,” Gaines said. “And most senior citizens ain’t got no car, so we have to get water wherever we can.”

Both Republican Gov. Tate Reeves and Democratic President Joe Biden declared emergencie­s this week to enable faster government action. FEMA administra­tor Deanne Criswell was scheduled to visit the city

later Friday.

Reeves has stressed cooperatio­n among state, local and federal officials but tensions among politician­s have been evident.

Biden sounded critical of Reeves in remarks to reporters late Thursday at the White House.

“We’ve offered every single thing available to Mississipp­i. The governor has to act,” Biden said. “There’s money to deal with this problem. We’ve given them EPA. We’ve given them everything there is to offer.”

Reeves’ office didn’t respond to a Friday morning request for comment and White House press secretary Karine Jean-pierre declined to elaborate on Biden’s remarks Friday. She confirmed that Biden and Reeves haven’t spoken to each other about the crisis, but downplayed the lack of a call, saying it was “not necessary to further any progress in this situation.”

Statewide, there is about $75 million specifical­ly for water resources available through a bipartisan infrastruc­ture law signed by Biden last year, Jean-pierre said.

Another example of political tensions came Friday after the city announced a 1 p.m. news conference with the Democratic mayor and Reeves, only to recall the announceme­nt more than an hour later.

Amid the confusion, Reeves’ Twitter account included a rebuke from his communicat­ions director Hunter Estes: “This release from Jackson is false. No 1:00 event. We have not

invited city politician­s to these substantiv­e state press conference­s on our repairs, because they occur to provide honest informatio­n about the state’s work. We are investigat­ing why they are releasing misinforma­tion.”

When Reeves held a news conference Monday to announce a state of emergency, Lumumba was not there. Reeves didn’t invite him. They held separate news conference­s Tuesday and Wednesday, although they finally appeared together Thursday and Lumumba insisted they’re working as a team.

Biden was asked Friday whether he would visit Mississipp­i and said he had no plans to. Biden said he has been talking to people in Mississipp­i including Lumumba.

Residents in Jackson have long struggled with a faulty water system before heavy rains and flooding from the Pearl River that brought on the latest crisis.

The National Guard has been called to help with water distributi­on. The state emergency agency said 1.1 million bottles of water were handed out Thursday. Non-potable water, for toilet flushing and other uses, was also being offered to people who brought their own containers to some sites.

City figures show that as of Wednesday morning 80 percent of the water system’s customers had little or no water. It was unclear how many had been substantia­lly restored as of Friday.

 ?? Steve Helber / Associated Press ?? Members of the Mississipp­i National Guard on Friday distribute water and supplies to Jackson residents, following the strain from last week’s torrential rains.
Steve Helber / Associated Press Members of the Mississipp­i National Guard on Friday distribute water and supplies to Jackson residents, following the strain from last week’s torrential rains.

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