Showing posts with label fails. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fails. Show all posts

Jackson, Miss., in water crisis as treatment plant fails


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More than 150,000 residents of Jackson, Miss., remained without access to safe drinking water Tuesday, a day after officials announced that the city’s main treatment plant had failed, creating an emergency that could last “indefinitely.”

State and local leaders scrambled to address the crisis, which will require an unprecedented mobilization effort to provide water for flushing toilets, cooking and bathing. Officials have promised to distribute bottled water across the city, and to identify water reserves for the fire department.

In a news conference, Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba (D) said his administration would work with a “coalition of the willing” to “improve the system that has been failing for decades.”

But he also highlighted the years of neglect that led to the disaster, arguing that his city deserved better. “We’ve been going it alone for the better part of two years when it comes to the Jackson water crisis,” Lumumba said, adding that it was never a “matter of if our system will fail but when.”

Jackson, which is 82 percent Black, had been under a boil-water advisory for the past month, after trouble with the main pumps at the O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant. The situation escalated this week, after heavy rainfall and near-record flooding on the Pearl River completely knocked out service at the city’s primary water treatment plant.

As of Tuesday morning, some neighborhoods in Jackson had no running water. Jackson Public Schools said that starting Tuesday, all of its schools would shift to virtual learning.

Experts say this crisis was years in the making, a result of inadequate funding for essential infrastructure upgrades and tension between leaders of this majority-Black, Democrat-led city and the White Republicans who run the state.

Mukesh Kumar, who ran Jackson’s Department of Planning and Development from 2017 to 2019, said the seeds of the water crisis were planted in the 1960s, when White residents left the city in droves after federal courts mandated the integration of the city’s schools.

As the city shrunk, there was less money to fund schools and other resources. Middle-class Black families left as a result, leaving Jackson without the tax revenue it needed to upgrade its century-old water system.

State investment would have helped close the gap, Kumar said. But state officials repeatedly declined to fund improvements, leaving the city to fend for itself, he added.

“It sounds like they’re still fighting the same kind of battles with the same lines drawn instead of starting to prioritize what the people of Jackson need,” said Kumar, who has since left Jackson to run the Waco Metropolitan Planning Organization in Texas.

Gov. Tate Reeves (R) did not respond to interview requests from The Washington Post. On Tuesday, Reeves declared a state of emergency and activated the Mississippi Guard.

“The state is marshaling tremendous resources to protect the people of our capital city,” Reeves said in a statement. “It will take time for that to come to fruition. But we are here in times of crisis, for anyone in the state who needs it.” Reeves said the state was prepared to distribute water from alternative sources for “as long as we have to.”

But he also highlighted the complexity of the task facing officials. “Replacing our largest city’s infrastructure of running water with human distribution is a massively complicated logistical task,” he said in a statement.

Don’t be ‘squeamish’ about drinking reused wastewater, U.K. official says

In a news conference Monday night, Reeves appeared to suggest that Lumumba had kept state officials in the dark about the status of the water treatment plant, suggesting that the city had been unable to provide the state with a timeline of when the plant would be in “proper” operating condition. Lumumba, who was elected to a second term last year, was not at the briefing.

At a Tuesday news conference, Lumumba said his administration had been transparent with state officials.

Jackson has struggled for years with water issues. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan toured the city’s main plant last year to highlight what his agency called “long-standing environmental justice concerns in historically marginalized communities.”

In March, the agency issued an emergency order stating that the city’s water system presented “imminent and substantial endangerment” to residents and could contain E. coli bacteria. Last year, as President Biden campaigned for his infrastructure legislation, he said that “never again can we allow what happened in Flint, Michigan, and Jackson, Mississippi.”

Heavy rains caused Mississippi’s Pearl River to swell and crest at more than 35 feet on Aug. 29, just shy of the major flood stage. (Video: Reuters)

But Reeves and other officials have repeatedly opposed efforts to fund water treatment upgrades.

State lawmakers sunk efforts by the city to raise infrastructure funds through a sales tax increase. During winter 2021, when at least 40,000 Jackson residents went weeks without running water, Reeves told city leaders that they needed to do a better job “collecting their water bill payments before they start going and asking everyone else to pony up more money.” (In 2020, Reeves vetoed bipartisan legislation that would have provided relief to poor residents with past-due water bills, calling the idea “free money.”)

A 2021 bill that would have authorized a bond issuance to assist Jackson with making repairs and improvements to water and sewer systems died in the Republican-controlled state House Ways and Means committee.

In the wake of the water crisis, Democratic state officials have called on the state to take action.

“The state, with unprecedented money in the bank, must step up and invest in Jackson, and save a system that serves almost one-tenth of all Mississippians,” David Blount, a Democratic state senator whose district includes parts of the city of Jackson, said in a statement, adding, “We need to act now.”

Kumar worries that the situation in Jackson is a harbinger of other crises if cities are left to deal with the effects of climate change.

“Building a resilient infrastructure system is not something that a poor city of 150,000 people will be able to magically just build very quickly,” he said.

Kumar said that money from Biden’s $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, passed earlier this year, could also help address those urgent needs. But some experts warn that it might not be so easy.

“Anyone who thinks Mississippi will change the very consistent practice of not investing in Black people — they’re delusional,” Andre M. Perry, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, told The Post late last year. “If you’re the president of the United States and you have an equity agenda, you have to be worried that this money going to statehouses will not actually get to places like Jackson.”

Griff Witte contributed to this report.


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UNSC fails to approve more Taliban travel exemption

Russia and China want to allow all 13 Afghan Taliban officials to continue to travel, UN diplomats say while US and Western nations are determined to cut the number over Taliban's policies.

Dozens of Taliban members have been on the UN sanctions blacklist for years, subject to a travel ban, asset freeze and arms embargo.
Dozens of Taliban members have been on the UN sanctions blacklist for years, subject to a travel ban, asset freeze and arms embargo. (Reuters)

The divided UN Security Council (UNSC) has failed to reach an agreement on whether to extend travel exemptions for 13 Taliban officials now governing Afghanistan.

UN diplomats said on Friday Russia and China want to allow all 13 to continue to travel while the US and Western nations are determined to cut the number to protest the Taliban's rollback of women's rights and failure to form an inclusive government as it promised.

Russia and China asked for more time on Friday evening to consider the latest US proposal, the Security Council diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because discussions have been private.

So, the travel ban will be restored on all 13 Taliban officials until Monday afternoon at the earliest when Russia and China must now respond to the US proposal.

Dozens of Taliban members have been on the UN sanctions blacklist for years, subject to a travel ban, asset freeze and arms embargo. 

But some Taliban officials were granted waivers so they could travel to participate in talks aimed at restoring peace and stability to Afghanistan.

READ MORE: Year to the ground: Taliban’s quest for elusive global legitimacy

Improved security 

Since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan last August 15 as US and NATO forces were in the final stages of their chaotic withdrawal from the country after 20 years, as many as 700 people have been killed and 1,400 wounded even though security, on the whole, has improved, according to a report last month by the UN political mission in Afghanistan. 

It highlighted how women have been stripped of many of their human rights, barred from secondary education and subjected to restrictions on their movements.

In June, the Security Council committee monitoring sanctions against the Taliban banned two Taliban officials from traveling in response to their crackdown on women –– Said Ahmad Shaidkhel, the acting deputy education minister, and Abdul Baqi Basir Awal Shah, also known as Abdul Baqi Haqqani, the acting Minister of Higher Education.

With the expiration of travel waivers for the remaining 13 Taliban officials looming, the United State on Thursday proposed re-imposing the travel ban on seven of them and keeping the exemption for six others, but limiting their travel only to Qatar, where US-Taliban talks have taken place, council diplomats said.

READ MORE: How smouldering discontent affects the Taliban rule in Afghanistan

Opposition to Russia, China

Russia and China made a rival proposal that all 13 Taliban officials be granted travel exemptions for 90 days, but only to go to Russia, China, Qatar and "regional countries," the diplomats said.

Russia and China objected to the US proposal, the diplomats said, and the United Kingdom, France and Ireland opposed the Russia-China proposal, insisting that the exemption can't continue for all 13 officials because of the Taliban's lack of progress on meeting its commitments on women, forming an inclusive government and other issues.

On Friday afternoon, diplomats said, the US revised its proposal which would ban travel for seven of the Taliban officials and keep the travel waivers for six others for 90 days with no geographic limits.

That's the proposal that Russia and China are now considering.

READ MORE: Dozens of economists urge US to free Afghanistan's frozen assets

Source: AP


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