The Denver Post

Cold wreaks havoc on waterworks

- By Melinda Deslatte and Leah Willingham

JACKSON, M I SS.» The sunshine is back, and the ice has melted. But more than a week after a deep freeze across the South, many communitie­s are still grappling with getting clean water to their residents.

Families stood in lines for hours to get drinking water. They boiled it to make it safe to drink or brush their teeth. They scooped up snow and melted it in their bathtubs. Hospitals collected buckets of water to flush toilets.

“You don’t realize how much you use water until you don’t have it,” said Brian Crawford, chief administra­tive officer for the Willis-Knighton Health System in the northweste­rn Louisiana city of Shreveport, where water pressure at one hospital only started returning to normal Wednesday. Tanker trucks had supplied it with water since last week.

For years, experts have warned of the need to upgrade aging and often-neglected waterworks. Now, after icy weather cracked the region’s water mains, froze equipment and left millions without service, it’s clear just how much work needs to be done.

The unfolding problems have exposed extensive vulnerabil­ities. Many water systems have decades-old pipes, now fragile and susceptibl­e to breaking. White flight dropped tax revenue in some cities, and a lack of investment has caused problems to become even costlier to fix. Many systems in the South were not built with such low temperatur­es in mind. But with climate change projected to bring more extreme weather, problems such as those seen last week could return.

A 2018 survey by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency estimated $473 billion was needed over 20 years to maintain and improve water infrastruc­ture. In a 2020 report, the American Society of Civil Engineers said a water main breaks every two minutes on average in the U.S., and described “chronic, long-term and insufficie­nt investment.” The report warned that the “nation’s public health and the economy will be at risk.”

Actually it’s already happening.

The Mississipp­i capital of Jackson struggled to fix its damaged water grid, with thousands still facing outages. In Memphis, Tenn., residents in the city of 650,000 were told for nearly a week to boil water for three minutes if they planned to use it for drinking, cooking or brushing their teeth. The boil-water advisory was lifted late last week.

Nearly 25,000 Louisianan­s still had water outages last week, and hundreds of thousands more were under boil advisories.

In Texas, more than 2 million remained under boil water notices Wednesday and 40 public water systems are “nonoperati­onal,” affecting 25,000 people, state officials said. At the height of the problems last week, at least 7 million Texans were told to boil their water. The order was lifted Sunday for Houston, where millions had endured power and water outages in the nation’s fourth-largest city, which is more accustomed to hurricanes than winter storms.

As temperatur­es fell below freezing across the South, residents kept their faucets open to prevent pipes from freezing. But the increased demand taxed the struggling systems, and the low water pressure meant that boil advisories were needed until safety tests could be completed.

Charles Williams, director of public works for the city of Jackson, said that as frozen machinery at the water plant began to thaw with rising temperatur­es, dozens of water mains broke.

Old pipes in the city have a history of breaking after cold weather, but a declining tax base has Jackson struggling to maintain its infrastruc­ture. Following integratio­n, affluent white families moved to the suburbs, taking their tax dollars with them. Now, more than a quarter of residents in Mississipp­i’s majority-Black capital live in poverty.

James Williams, 67, went eight days without water at his house and called Jackson’s water problem a public health crisis.

“The wealthy taxpayers left, so they left Jackson to suffer,” the retired public works department employee said. “It’s not their concern because they don’t live here no more.”

 ?? Photos by Rogelio V. Solis, The Associated Press ?? Mississipp­i Army National Guard Staff Sgt. Matthew Riley, left, and Sgt. Chase Toussaint place bottled water into a vehicle for distributi­on at the New Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church parking lot in Jackson, Miss.
Photos by Rogelio V. Solis, The Associated Press Mississipp­i Army National Guard Staff Sgt. Matthew Riley, left, and Sgt. Chase Toussaint place bottled water into a vehicle for distributi­on at the New Mount Zion Missionary Baptist Church parking lot in Jackson, Miss.
 ??  ?? Toussaint fills 5-gallon buckets with nonpotable water. It was being distribute­d at seven sites in Mississipp­i's capital city to help people flush their toilets.
Toussaint fills 5-gallon buckets with nonpotable water. It was being distribute­d at seven sites in Mississipp­i's capital city to help people flush their toilets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States