By Chi Chi Izundu, Mohamed Madi & Chelsea Bailey
in Jackson, Mississippi
Source: BBC
Marshall lives in west Jackson, in the US state of Mississippi – a predominantly black and poor part of the city. He has no choice but to drink the tap water that Jackson residents have been told to avoid. When he turns the tap on – the water runs brown.
He says it’s been like this for about eight months and he has no choice but to drink it.
“Yes ma’am. I been drinking it.” He smiles when we ask whether it worries him. “I turn 70 later this month,” he says.
Marshall doesn’t have a car, so he can’t get to the sites where water is being handed out by the National Guard. He also doesn’t have electricity or gas because of a recent fire in the house next door, which means he can’t boil the water to help make it safer.
“Very seldom it’s pure. Sometimes it’s a little lighter, a little darker. In the bath tub when I first turn it on, it always comes out rust, then it gets lighter. But every time, the rust comes first.”
He says he thinks a devastating combination of aging infrastructure and climate change ultimately led to the latest collapse of Jackson’s water supply.
In 2020, when freezing temperatures caused Jackson’s water treatment facility to shut down, Mr Banks says his district went without water for nearly six weeks – far longer than the surrounding areas. The town’s infrastructure has struggled to keep up ever since.
“We have not gone a month without having a ‘boil water’ notice or low to no water pressure in the last two years,” he says. “Unfortunately, that is something we have gotten used to as American citizens – nobody should be adapting to that type of quality of life.”
Time and again, Mr Banks says, those who are forced to adapt have predominately been people of colour. For years, the councilman says he has watched state funding pour into the infrastructure of towns and areas around Jackson – but they’ve missed the facilities that need it most, including the city’s water treatment plant.
President Joe Biden’s landmark infrastructure bill earmarked money for disadvantaged and underserved communities like Jackson, which in 2020 had a population of 163,000. But the funding is allocated by state legislators who, Mr Banks says, often succumb to politics and prioritise projects for their constituents instead of focusing on fixing systemic issues in Jackson.
“We have a water treatment facility that’s obsolete that nobody has thought about for years,” says Professor Edmund Merem, an urban planning and environmental studies professor at Jackson State University.
“I think the problem is that the reaction tends to be ad hoc.”
But Prof Merem also believes another factor has pulled focus and funding away from the Jackson’s crumbling infrastructure – race.
Experts and advocates say what is happening in Jackson – and in towns like Flint in Michigan, where the water supply was contaminated with lead – is a direct legacy of generations of discrimination and segregation.
“This is a deep seated, decades-long, in the making kind of situation,” says Arielle King, a lawyer and environmental justice advocate.
“I think the history of racial segregation and redlining in this country have deeply contributed to the environmental injustices we see right now.”
Redlining began in the 1940s as a government-sanctioned practice of denying mortgages and loans to people of colour because they were deemed “too risky.”
The programme lasted more than 40 years, and as a result, Ms King says, low-income, predominately black communities were concentrated in areas with polluting industries like landfills, oil refineries, and wastewater treatment plants.
And those areas, she notes, still exist today.
She points to parts of the country like so-called Cancer Alley as an example. Once the home to Louisiana’s sprawling plantations, the area along the Mississippi River is now an industrial highway of more than 150 oil refineries and factories.
For decades, the predominately black residents have suffered from some of the highest rates of cancer in the nation because of pollution.
Ms King says the legacy of this kind of environmental racism, coupled with decades of underinvestment in low-income areas is playing out in Jackson.
“They can say that there are different factors that lead to flooding, but people wouldn’t be subject to areas that are susceptible to flooding without redlining in the first place,” Ms King says.
“So again, it does kind of come back to race, and environmental racism, unfortunately, every time.”
Sarina Larson is studying to be a lawyer and lives a few blocks from Marshall. She moved from Sacramento and wants to be a public defence lawyer. She too blames redlining for the issues the area has been having. She admits that most people can’t afford the $300 dollar (£260) filter she bought.
“A water crisis like this doesn’t become an issue until it affects people of a higher class. It has been ongoing and Jackson has been an example of that. People’s health is secondary to the state.”
The BBC met Imani Olugbala-Aziz at a local community centre where she and others from the volunteer group Cooperation Jackson were handing out bottled water. It took less than an hour for them to run out. She tells us she barely has water at her own home.
She says the local area has a high homeless rate and local shops have closed which makes it hard for people to buy water.
Ms Olugbala-Aziz says people are paying high water bills, whilst those in predominately white areas aren’t.
“This is not something that has just happening. This is slow rolling and it has gotten to the point of untenable. We’re struggling here.”