Las Vegas Review-Journal

Residents weary as city’s water crisis persists

Timeline for repairs unclear after storms

- By Jeff Martin, Leah Willingham and Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, Miss. — Frustratio­ns are mounting in Mississipp­i’s largest city, more than two weeks since winter storms and freezing weather ravaged the city’s water system — knocking out water for drinking and making it impossible for many to flush their toilets.

For more than two weeks now, residents in the city of 160,000 have been warned to boil any water that does come out of kitchen taps before using it.

“I pray it comes back on,” Jackson resident Nita Smith said. “I’m not sure how much more of this we can take.”

Smith has not had water at her house for nearly three weeks now, she said.

Smith is concerned about her mother who has diabetes because not having water makes it difficult to take her medicine. Her mother and most of the other older people on her street don’t drive anymore, so she’s been helping them get water to clean themselves and flush their toilets, she said.

A key focus of city crews this week is filling the system’s water tanks to an optimal level, officials said in an update late Tuesday. Workers are also continuing to fix dozens of water main breaks and leaks throughout the capital city.

City officials on Wednesday planned to continue distributi­ng water for flushing toilets at several pickup points.

But they have given no timeline for when the crisis will be resolved, nor have they said how many residents remain without water. It is difficult to estimate how many customers remained without water Wednesday, said Michelle Atoa, a spokeswoma­n for the mayor’s office.

The crisis has taken a toll on businesses. Jeff Good is co-owner of three Jackson restaurant­s, and two of them remained closed Wednesday. In an update to his customers posted on Facebook, Good said the businesses have insurance, but he is concerned about his employees.

“We will not be financiall­y ruined,” Good wrote. “The spirits of our team members are my biggest concern.

“A true malaise and depression is setting in,” he added. “I am staying in touch, keeping them informed of the facts, trying to find the path each day.”

Bonnie Bishop, 68, and her husband, Mike, 63, have been without water at their Jackson home for 14 days as both struggle with health problems.

She is recovering after a threeand-half-month hospital stay with the coronaviru­s and back at home but still in therapy to learn how to walk again and deals with constant neuropathy in her hands and feet.

She has not been able to soak her feet in warm water, something that usually helps with the neuropathy, or help her husband with gathering water to boil for cooking for cleaning.

Mike Bishop just had surgery on his elbow. The first week of the couple was without water, he still had staples in his arm and was hauling 5-gallon containers from his truck, his wife said. They need water and feel like they have no choice.

“It’s a lot of wear and tear on the elderly,” she said.

Jackson’s water system has not been able to provide a sustainabl­e flow of water throughout the city since the mid-february storms, city officials have said.

The system “basically crashed like a computer, and now we’re trying to rebuild it,” Public Works Director Charles Williams said at a recent briefing.

The city’s water mains are more than a century old, and its infrastruc­ture needs went unaddresse­d for decades, Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba has said.

“We more than likely have more than a $2 billion issue with our infrastruc­ture,” he said.

 ?? Rogelio V. Solis The Associated Press ?? Mississipp­i Army National Guard Sgt. Chase Toussaint, right, and Staff Sgt. Matthew Riley fill drums Monday in Jackson, Miss., with water for flushing toilets.
Rogelio V. Solis The Associated Press Mississipp­i Army National Guard Sgt. Chase Toussaint, right, and Staff Sgt. Matthew Riley fill drums Monday in Jackson, Miss., with water for flushing toilets.

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