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Black Families Bear the Brunt of the Jackson Water Crisis and Environmental Racism
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:15 am
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:15 am
Black Families Bear the Brunt of the Jackson Water Crisis and Environmental Racism
In late August 2022, the Pearl River flooded due to severe storms. The flooding caused Jackson, Mississippi's largest water treatment facility, which was already operating on backup pumps because of prior failures, to stop treating drinking water indefinitely.
Two hundred thousand Jackson residents have been left without access to safe drinking water. According to the BBC, Mississippi National Guard troops have handed out 1.1 million water bottles, but it's been hard to keep up with needs.
"It's been challenging over the last almost five weeks as a working mom living with a chronic health condition," says Dr. LaFarra Young, MD, a physician, and Jackson-based business owner.
"I work as a physician, have a new beauty business, and I'm a mother—it's stressful juggling everything knowing we don't have clean water we can rely on," she says. "Clean water in America should be a basic human right, which has not been a priority for the residents of South Jackson for years. I live in Northeast Jackson, and unfortunately, it took my area of the city to be affected before we got national attention."
This is not the first water crisis in Jackson and not the first example of environmental and infrastructure racism in the US. Jackson needed $1 billion alone last year to repair its pipes and treatment facilities, and the state has neglected Jackson's 80% Black population, according to the Brookings Institution.
Systematic inequality has meant cities such as Jackson, one of the poorest in the nation, have experienced years of neglected infrastructure, leading to the current water crisis. It mirrors the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, which was 57% Black when thousands of Flint residents were exposed to dangerous levels of lead, outbreaks of Legionnaires disease, and at least 12 people died.
Infrastructure in many predominately Black communities in the US has been failing for decades, and Black families are left to bear the brunt of environmental racism.
"Infrastructure failure does not happen overnight. This is neglect by professionals who are supposed to oversee our best interest and well-being," says Eric Dupre', an infrastructure and environmental expert with over 20 years of experience.
"Unfortunately, low-income areas are typically the most neglected. Our basic water and sewer infrastructure in the United States is in horrible condition, and new state policies to view the health and quality of this infrastructure need to happen," he says. "Look at ASCE report card grades on our infrastructure—we need a big change to make our infrastructure livable, especially in low-income areas like Jackson."
LINK
In late August 2022, the Pearl River flooded due to severe storms. The flooding caused Jackson, Mississippi's largest water treatment facility, which was already operating on backup pumps because of prior failures, to stop treating drinking water indefinitely.
Two hundred thousand Jackson residents have been left without access to safe drinking water. According to the BBC, Mississippi National Guard troops have handed out 1.1 million water bottles, but it's been hard to keep up with needs.
"It's been challenging over the last almost five weeks as a working mom living with a chronic health condition," says Dr. LaFarra Young, MD, a physician, and Jackson-based business owner.
"I work as a physician, have a new beauty business, and I'm a mother—it's stressful juggling everything knowing we don't have clean water we can rely on," she says. "Clean water in America should be a basic human right, which has not been a priority for the residents of South Jackson for years. I live in Northeast Jackson, and unfortunately, it took my area of the city to be affected before we got national attention."
This is not the first water crisis in Jackson and not the first example of environmental and infrastructure racism in the US. Jackson needed $1 billion alone last year to repair its pipes and treatment facilities, and the state has neglected Jackson's 80% Black population, according to the Brookings Institution.
Systematic inequality has meant cities such as Jackson, one of the poorest in the nation, have experienced years of neglected infrastructure, leading to the current water crisis. It mirrors the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, which was 57% Black when thousands of Flint residents were exposed to dangerous levels of lead, outbreaks of Legionnaires disease, and at least 12 people died.
Infrastructure in many predominately Black communities in the US has been failing for decades, and Black families are left to bear the brunt of environmental racism.
"Infrastructure failure does not happen overnight. This is neglect by professionals who are supposed to oversee our best interest and well-being," says Eric Dupre', an infrastructure and environmental expert with over 20 years of experience.
"Unfortunately, low-income areas are typically the most neglected. Our basic water and sewer infrastructure in the United States is in horrible condition, and new state policies to view the health and quality of this infrastructure need to happen," he says. "Look at ASCE report card grades on our infrastructure—we need a big change to make our infrastructure livable, especially in low-income areas like Jackson."
LINK
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:16 am to djmed
Why are they neglected? Because Da Mayor and the rest of the City Council are using the city as a piggy bank and neglecting shite that is necessary.
It’s a city which is heavily black and voted for the guy in charge at about a 90% clip a few years back. He owns this shite whether he wants to admit it or not.
It’s a city which is heavily black and voted for the guy in charge at about a 90% clip a few years back. He owns this shite whether he wants to admit it or not.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:17 am to djmed
If only they had black mayors for the past 30 years to help them.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:17 am to djmed
Black families vote for incompetent politicians too.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:19 am to teke184
We live in an age of imputed competence.
We believe that running the government is easy and that anyone can do it.
If we have learned nothing over the past 4 years, we have learned that governing can be a very difficult task. And we shouldn’t elect people expecting them to magically become competent managers upon election.
We believe that running the government is easy and that anyone can do it.
If we have learned nothing over the past 4 years, we have learned that governing can be a very difficult task. And we shouldn’t elect people expecting them to magically become competent managers upon election.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:20 am to djmed
How is it “racism” when “leadership” is the same race as the “victims”?
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:20 am to teke184
quote:
Because Da Mayor and the rest of the City Council are using the city as a piggy bank and neglecting shite that is necessary.
Look at the companies the city sued as a result of the water fiasco. If you supported the Mayor financially, you somehow escaped the lawsuit.
But it’s environmental racism. Sure.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:21 am to djmed
Shocking I tell you that in a majority black community blacks are affected by a water crisis the most…. Damn people are retarded
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:23 am to djmed
80% Black, 80% Blacks with no water
I don't see the racial correlation at all. These people are crazy.
I don't see the racial correlation at all. These people are crazy.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:24 am to djmed
Maybe black constituents need to elect more capable leaders who will look out for their needs?
In Orleans, we have a Mayor and now a Sheriff who think they’re entitled to vacations on taxpayer dollar. That’s just the tip of the ice berg of public funds misuse that we’re aware of.
If people want competent leadership, they need to stop electing incompetent and corrupt trash.
In Orleans, we have a Mayor and now a Sheriff who think they’re entitled to vacations on taxpayer dollar. That’s just the tip of the ice berg of public funds misuse that we’re aware of.
If people want competent leadership, they need to stop electing incompetent and corrupt trash.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:25 am to Beauw
quote:
How is it “racism” when “leadership” is the same race as the “victims”?
Because I am sure they are blaming it on the state
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:26 am to djmed
quote:
"Infrastructure failure does not happen overnight. This is neglect by professionals who are supposed to oversee our best interest and well-being," says Eric Dupre', an infrastructure and environmental expert with over 20 years of experience.
"Unfortunately, low-income areas are typically the most neglected. Our basic water and sewer infrastructure in the United States is in horrible condition, and new state policies to view the health and quality of this infrastructure need to happen," he says. "Look at ASCE report card grades on our infrastructure—we need a big change to make our infrastructure livable, especially in low-income areas like Jackson."
I love how when these Urban-DEM areas have governments that fail, pundits explicitly state that government has failed but they say it generally and then expand it into the federal government...as if DC is responsible for maintaining every municipal utility across the US
quote:
This is neglect by professionals who are supposed to oversee our best interest and well-being,
Why not name these professionals? Why not describe these professionals?
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:26 am to djmed
Where is Al Sharpton? Jessie Jackson? I’m sure those two could lend a hand.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:27 am to ibldprplgld
Sadly the idiots they have elected seem to be smarter than the majority of the electorate….
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:27 am to Fun Bunch
quote:
Because I am sure they are blaming it on the state
A little, but much more "institutional racism", aka, "white people took all the money" and made the area poor so that it couldn't afford to maintain the infrastructure (which is also bullshite. Jackson has a huge budget).
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:28 am to the808bass
Racism, Racism, racism......
Never looking at the obvious cause......corruption and incompetence.....
Never looking at the obvious cause......corruption and incompetence.....
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:32 am to SlowFlowPro
quote:
"white people took all the money" and made the area poor so that it couldn't afford to maintain the infrastructure (which is also bullshite. Jackson has a huge budget).
White people move out --> white flight --> racist
White people move in --> gentrification --> racist
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:34 am to Fun Bunch
How many large metro areas can't run a water system?....having a hard time thinking of one....Flint, MI maybe?
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:36 am to 14&Counting
Jacks, Flint, and Detroit are the three big ones.
Some smaller cities have similar problem. And a lot of it is tied up in an inability to accurately measure and bill people as well as an unwillingness to cut off service for nonpayment.
Some smaller cities have similar problem. And a lot of it is tied up in an inability to accurately measure and bill people as well as an unwillingness to cut off service for nonpayment.
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:39 am to djmed
quote:
In late August 2022, the Pearl River flooded due to severe storms. The flooding caused Jackson, Mississippi's largest water treatment facility, which was already operating on backup pumps because of prior failures, to stop treating drinking water indefinitely.
quote:
Systematic inequality has meant cities such as Jackson, one of the poorest in the nation, have experienced years of neglected infrastructure, leading to the current water crisis. It mirrors the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, which was 57% Black when thousands of Flint residents were exposed to dangerous levels of lead, outbreaks of Legionnaires disease, and at least 12 people died.
1) blacks gain political power in urban areas
2) urban areas controlled by blacks go to shite because of CONSISTENT MISMANAGAMENT AND CORRUPTION
3) whitey's fault
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