Monday, March 15, 2021

Jackson, Mississippi Residents Enter Fourth Week Of Water Crisis

For a month now, the residents of Jackson, Mississippi have found themselves in the midst of a water crisis where many of the families have had to struggle to get by without water. With what water is available, much of it has been found to be unsafe to drink after testing by the city. Thus, these families have resorted to rationing water bottles or, even using snow, which meant that maintaining hygiene, cooking and staying hydrated have been difficult tasks. The lack of water is a result of large winter storms that had primarily ruptured the city’s pipes, which have still not been fixed. Many residents of Jacksonville’s 80% African American population have expressed suspicions of inherit discrimination behind the city's crisis that is causing thousands to suffer. To many, this issue can be traced back to the deeply rooted racism within the city’s underfunded infrastructure that is sustaining this water crisis. 



Mississippi has a long history of discrimination within the state government. In a CNN article it mentions that the impoverished and unsupported conditions found in Mississippi are caused by the same phenomena seen in other American cities, like Flint, Michigan, where crises similar to this one have occurred. The article states that “American poverty springs not from lack of funds, but instead from White supremacy” (CNN). In fact, Mississippi’s lack of funding especially in historically minority communities can be attributed to governmental processes like redlining, gerrymandering and mass incarcerations which helped perpetuate racial inequality and poverty while maintaining white supremacy by state officials. As the article puts it, “America's White elite have always used the specter of racism to prevent the formation of a broad coalition of people with similar class interests, regardless of race” (CNN). This is why cities like Jackson, where a strong majority of African Americans live there are the hardest hit by this crisis. 


Unfortunately, this situation does not seem to be resolved anytime soon as, currently, white Republicans essentially control most of Mississippi’s state legislature. The Mississippi Free Press has accused the state's government of essentially refusing to fund any of the necessary repairs within Jackson. They have pointed out that how, in the time that thousands of African American families struggled for survival, Mississippi legislation focused their time on passing “the nation’s first anti-transgender law of 2021” (Mississippi’s Free Press). Furthermore, the Press demonstrated how the few repairs that have been done were only on affluent white communities while most black communities like Jacksonville were ignored. Essentially, the white Mississippi legislature is keeping African Americans trapped in a cycle of perpetuating poverty.


With 12% of Mississippi’s white population living in poverty while 30-31% of Mississippi’s African American population and 32% of it's Native American population live in poverty, it is no surprise that thousands of activists continue to denounce the deeply rooted institutionalized racism that dominates Mississippi's political governing system. This current water crisis only further demonstrates how Mississippi needs to pursue reparative justice by acknowledging and ameliorating the inherent discrimination against Mississippi’s minority communities. 


Sources:

NYT

CNN

NPR

Mississippi Free Press


4 comments:

Anonymous said...

That is sad that state will refuse to repair the water pipes for the residents of Jackson, Mississippi. I would that the lack of water is also harming the white residents of the city. They could attempt to pressure the state but maybe they are fine going elsewhere for water. Also did the black residents of the city attempt to reach out the county or city council to fix the pipes.

Anonymous said...

Mississippi's institutionalized racism and this water crisis prove that the US has a long way to go in the fight for equal rights for all. I think it is very sad that Mississippi refuses to fix the water pipes, and I hope that they can change their mind and assist all of their residents, like a government should.

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

Maintenance and improvements of infrastructure for necessities such as water are obviously important, and the cold snaps in which the breakdown of such infrastructure is occurring are likely to become increasingly more prevalent. An article by NBC news indicates that many individuals anticipated something similar to the water outage occurring in Jackson Mississippi based on events in 2018, in which other important pipe systems failed due to extreme stress under cold weather surges. Climate change does not only lead to warmer temperatures but colder ones as well. The increasing polarization of climates leads to higher highs and lower lows, and consequently, cold snaps such as those that damaged the water infrastructure in Jackson are likely to become increasingly more common. Furthermore, urban areas are subject to increasingly higher temperatures due to the high absorption of heat by buildings and lack of flora to properly deal with it, making lasting water shortages potentially even more deadly.

NBC Article: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/month-without-water-jackson-mississippi-struggling-residents-fear-next-outage-n1261016