Mississippi Crisis Highlights Climate Threat To Drinking Water Nationwide (nytimes.com) 91
Flash floods, wildfires and hurricanes are easy to recognize as ravages of a fast-changing climate. But now, climate change has also emerged as a growing threat to clean, safe drinking water across the country. The New York Times: The deluge that knocked out a fraying water plant in Jackson, Miss., this week, depriving more than 150,000 people of drinking water, offered the latest example of how quickly America's aging treatment plants and decades-old pipes can crumple under the shocks of a warming world. "There's a crisis at hand," said Mikhail V. Chester, a professor of civil, environmental and sustainable engineering at Arizona State University. "The climate is simply changing too fast, relative to how quickly we could change our infrastructure." Earlier this summer, more than 25,000 people lost their water, some for weeks, after deadly floods ripped through eastern Kentucky, breaking water lines as they obliterated entire neighborhoods.
Utility companies across Texas spent the summer coping with hundreds of water-main breaks as record heat baked and shifted the drought-stricken soil surrounding pipes. This came after a bitter winter storm that plunged Texas into freezing darkness in February 2021 and caused thousands of pipes to burst. And from the Gulf Coast to the East Coast, supercharged hurricanes like Harvey and Ida now regularly debilitate water suppliers, forcing hundreds of thousands of people to boil their water or scramble for bottles days or weeks after the storms pass. This is on top of the slower-moving threats such as rising sea levels that can contaminate water supplies with saltwater, or a Western "mega-drought" that is withering reservoirs and parching the Colorado River that supplies water to some 40 million people.
Utility companies across Texas spent the summer coping with hundreds of water-main breaks as record heat baked and shifted the drought-stricken soil surrounding pipes. This came after a bitter winter storm that plunged Texas into freezing darkness in February 2021 and caused thousands of pipes to burst. And from the Gulf Coast to the East Coast, supercharged hurricanes like Harvey and Ida now regularly debilitate water suppliers, forcing hundreds of thousands of people to boil their water or scramble for bottles days or weeks after the storms pass. This is on top of the slower-moving threats such as rising sea levels that can contaminate water supplies with saltwater, or a Western "mega-drought" that is withering reservoirs and parching the Colorado River that supplies water to some 40 million people.
Re:There's always a crisis somewhere (Score:4, Informative)
You'd be wrong. But then again, you know that. Because you have your own agenda.
Re:There's always a crisis somewhere (Score:5, Informative)
Well, gee, if you have the coldest summer in 20 years then clearly there is no climate change. Can you be any more daft?
Re: (Score:2)
Here in New Zealand we've just had the warmest and wettest Winter on record, it's also been the third year in a row that the record for the warmest Winter has been broken. https://niwa.co.nz/news/nzs-wa... [niwa.co.nz] https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/nat... [rnz.co.nz]
Re: (Score:1)
Its Jackson Mississippi. All that means is that Rankin county didn't perform any maintenance on the facility.
Re:GOP needs to pay up and not rich tax cuts! (Score:5, Informative)
You forget the GOP agenda...destroy a functioning Fed. Gov. and then campaign on the Fed. Gov. does not work. As an added bonus, when the debt becomes unsustainable, they finally get to whack SS and Medicare like they always wanted. And those nice rich folks will keep them supplied with plenty of campaign funds to keep the poor bamboozled.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, it is the GOPs fault in a city ran by Democrats. FFS!!! How about asking the Democrats that run the city why they deferred maintenance for so long? I guess it is just easier to blame the GOP for Democrat failures.
Climate change as a red herring (Score:5, Insightful)
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/n... [pbs.org]
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
No, but it is a bit irritating when reporters sensationalize events and selectively include facts to champion activism causes, regardless of the cause.
The straw that broke the camel's back? (Score:5, Insightful)
Did the straw break the camel's back? No. All the other weight added before that last fraction of an ounce is what broke the camel's back.
Jackson's water system has been collapsing from neglect for decades. The floods did it no favors but they played at worst a small role in the system's collapse.
Re:The straw that broke the camel's back? (Score:4)
This is exactly what happens. We neglect the essentials, spend on the frills and when something goes wrong we blame something else and hold our hand out.
We didn't spend on frills (Score:4, Informative)
That was actually the point. Right wing extremists literally call it starving the beast. The goal is to undermine the capacity of the government to function so you can seize control of it. The other phrase they use is small enough to drown in a bathtub.
This is what happens when you let extremism fester for decades because you're picking political candidates based on who has the most name recognition and the best TV ads and treating politics like its reality TV instead of a civic duty
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
This is a local issue not a Federal issue. Federal tax breaks had zero impact on Jackson Mississippi's water supply. Apples and oranges.
Re:We didn't spend on frills (Score:5, Informative)
Re: We didn't spend on frills (Score:2)
That's an informative article. The juxtaposition with the newspaper quotes also tells a story.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If people can't afford the basics of life like water, you have some really big social problems.
I note that the area is almost 80% black.
Re: (Score:2)
Wealthier States fund poorer states (Score:2)
And let's be perfectly clear there's nothing wrong with states that have more money giving it to states with less. We aren't a nation of individual states we are a nation of Americans. Do not ask for whom the Bell tolls it tolls for thee.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Federal taxes have no role in maintaining local water systems. This is squarely on the shoulders of the city's own leaders, not Congress.
Jesus Christ of course they do (Score:2)
Remember Flint Michigan? (Score:2)
When Flint's mismanagement led to widespread lead poisoning, the state took over, not the Feds. The state literally took over the operation of the city government because they had made such a mess. This is very similar to the situation in Jackson. The state probably should bail out Jackson, and boot out the city leaders as they do so.
Sure, I disagree with the tax cuts passed under Trump, but I disagree with them because they weren't accompanied by reductions in spending. Regardless, there is no direct line
Re: (Score:2)
Somehow I doubt the federal funding for water systems maintenance that Jackson got over a decade ago and spent less than a 10th of on water maintenance was impacted in any way by tax cuts.
Re: (Score:1)
The flooding had zero impact on the water plant. The mayor is lying through his teeth (again)
Re:Climate change as a red herring (Score:4, Interesting)
This is 100% gaslighting. The plant was high and dry during the "flooding", not one bit of damage. Local reporters flew a drone over it for proof. The city has been controlled by inept D politicians for over a generation and every time state or federal funds have been earmarked to modernize their water infrastructure they spent the money on something else (or rather, whatever money was leftover that they didn't pocket themselves). They've always known that when the water system became a giant crisis they would get a bailout by crying 'racism' whereas none of the other things they spent the money on instead would get funding. So that's what they did.
The problem isn't inept Democrats (Score:3, Informative)
I got a buddy of mine who's not the best with numbers and math and I never could get him to understand this concept. Blue collar buddy who didn't make a lot of money because we screwed over blue collar workers when we shifted their jobs to China and Mexico when the unions broke. As his pay went down he wor
Re: (Score:1)
Jackson MS is not rural. I didn't read past that.
When the fuck did I say it was? (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Rural voters have somehow been convinced that their interests don't align the interests of Americans in cities.
Probably because city slickers are constantly voting against the interests of rural voters.
Tennessee valley authority would like a word (Score:2)
And no we don't do that because we need rural voters to grow food. Slaves worked just fine for that for a very long time. We could just use prison labor. We did it because rural voters are Americans too and nobody gets left behind. Or at least that's what we tried and what the rural v
Re: (Score:2)
And no we don't do that because we need rural voters to grow food. Slaves worked just fine for that for a very long time. We could just use prison labor.
It's this kind of shit. All you city slickers talking as though you're superior. And then wonder why people don't want to vote for you.
That's just you reading your hate & anger into (Score:2)
Neither City or rural voters are superior. We're the same. But you've been convinced where somehow different. Rural voters have less money because we don't pay them very well to do the things they do. Our society gives shitloads of money to bankers and a tiny bit of money to Farmers. We pick winners and losers based on who can claim ownership instead of who actually does the work.
Re: (Score:2)
Neither City or rural voters are superior. We're the same
Then why do you look down on rural voters? I've seen you do it over and over. Not just in this thread, all over the place.
Because you watch too much Fox News
I don't watch Fox News, I've been reading your posts. The smug sense of superiority oozes out of them.
Re: (Score:2)
"The plant was high and dry during the "flooding", not one bit of damage. " and yet "They've always known that when the water system became a giant crisis"
So which is it? Is the plant operational or basket case. Make up your mind before spouting off.
Re: (Score:1)
The entire system was failing long before last week's flood, they were already under a boil notice. Jackson went through the same thing and made national news just a couple years ago. Where did the money go?
Re: (Score:1)
The water treatment plant was not affected at all by the flooding; it has been minor and relegated to areas that everyone knew were prone to flooding. The plant is not fully operational because it is poorly maintained and badly understaffed;
Re: (Score:2)
That's true, while aging infrastructure is not caused by climate change (correlation is not causation), they both have a common cause: too much infrastructure per capita, a.k.a. urban sprawl. We've spread ourselves too thin, expecting the next generation to pay for it like some kind of Ponzi scheme [strongtowns.org].
In a sane world, cities wouldn't be so terrified of a little traffic congestion but rather embrace it as a sign of success, just as any restaurant owner would be pleased to see a line out the door. (Not that dens [streetsblog.org]
Re: (Score:2)
Or, you know, they could stop service when people refuse to pay their bills and fix the leaks.
Re: (Score:2)
The problem is that the water grid operator wants the customer to pay for the leaks.
Happened to a friend of mine. Got new water pipe brought into his house, new meter outside to read for the water company.
Suddenly got absurd bills, in the $1000 range per month. The mongrels in the company told him: "that is normal", your previous bills are all wrong, expect to pay up for them.
So he got some independent consultants analysing the problem. Bad luck for the water company: he had his old meter still in the basem
Republicans hate and ruin government (Score:1, Insightful)
Mississippi is a shithole because it is run by republicans.
They can't even keep the water running in a medium sized city because they are too busy trying to explain why the Bible justifies their racism.
Mississippi sucks today, Mississippi sucks tomorrow! Mississippi sucks forever!
Also Trump is going to prison soon, so expect these thirsty retards to get even dumber.
No, Republicans love big government (Score:1, Insightful)
So long as it's doing the proper job: making the rich richer.
Oh, and with a large side of culture wars to get the plebs to vote against their own best interests.
Re: (Score:1)
Don't confuse them with facts (Score:2)
It only upsets them.
Re:Republicans hate and ruin government (Score:5, Informative)
https://www.npr.org/2022/08/31... [npr.org]
At the same time, it has struggled to secure state infrastructure funding. Last year, at least two bills aimed at helping raise money for water-system repairs died in the legislature. And in June 2020, Reeves, a Republican, vetoed bipartisan legislation designed to help residents with overdue water bills which, in turn, would have enabled the city to collect sorely needed water revenue.
People in the city are simply too poor to fund the infrastructure.
Re: (Score:2)
It's not too poor to fund a planetarium, and a cultural arts center, and a municipal auditorium, among many other arts-related budget items. These are all good things, but if the city can spend on art, it certainly isn't destitute.
https://docs.google.com/viewer... [google.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Republicans hate and ruin government (Score:4, Informative)
They can't even keep the water running in a medium sized city because they are too busy trying to explain why the Bible justifies their racism.
Oh, c'mon, not everything is racism. Let's take a look at the demographics of Jackson, shall we?
Oh [worldpopul...review.com]...
Re: (Score:1)
You aren't wrong.
Who cares if the city's water supply needs more funding? Those LIBRUL teachers are indoctrinating children with their WOKE agendas.
*crowd applauds*
Re: (Score:2)
The city found shitloads of money for art projects and football stadiums. Just none for water systems maintenance.
Re: Republicans hate and ruin government (Score:2)
This is about a single city in Mississippi thatâ(TM)s been historically ran by Democrats. But nice try, Republican state leadership has repeatedly bailed out the city and now still has nothing to show for it. Where did the money go?
Re: (Score:1)
Jackson is 82% black. There are no republicans in charge of anything in that city.
Re: (Score:1)
When you have tax cuts and avoid spending on infrastructure, a federal bailout is a reward for bad management. It would just encourage more of this.
Re: (Score:2)
The black politicians in Jackson are the most corrupt in the country. Every year for over a generation money has been allocated to fix the water system and every single year they spend that money on other things.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, it could be that there are even bigger holes than the water supply. What was the water money spent on?
Jackson: Black or African American alone, 82.5%. (Score:2)
How underfunding and white flight contributed to Jackson, Mississippi's water crisis [marketplace.org].
Not a climate threat, an idiot threat (Score:1)
Word on the street is they were running with backup pumps for months because their main pumps were out.
Backups break, and lo and behold, an emergency is declared and a new pump is brought in for replacement in a matter of days/weeks.
Kinda like a lot of excellent roof repair happens after some rain, not after a stretch of clear skies.
Re: (Score:1)
What?
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe he was watching Justified right before he got on slashdot and was confused.
State owned utilities are a problem (Score:2)
In order to spend money on serious upgrades the owner has to agree a bond issue and raise the cost of the product for consumers. Both of these will cause kick back and so don't happen; instead the necessary repairs don't happen.
The privitised utility model does help separate the responsibility.
Re: (Score:3)
Sensational nonsense (Score:2)
I got a headache just reading those two paragraphs; you want me to read the whole article? I'm not clicking that link.
Look, it's simple: maintenance was not done, and the inevitable happened. This has been a national problem for as long as the boomers have held the purse strings of our financial and political institutions - at least since the 90s. They're more than happy to spend the country into bankruptcy if it gets them one more face lift before having to slip into the grave.
Re: (Score:2)
This is not a generational problem, but a demographic problem.
Michael Burry (Score:2)
I guess Michael Burry investing in water doesn't seem like such a crazy idea after all.
1969 (Score:3)
Re: (Score:1, Insightful)
Only a tone-deaf idiot would send innocent children to a public school in Jackson. They'd come home with concussions and stab wounds, if not in a body-bag. White flight exists because of black violence.
Regrettably, Got the Weather they Voted For (Score:2)
Civilization is fagile (Score:2)
Now take into account that these are just the first small, benign (relatively speaking) effects...
Re: (Score:1, Insightful)
This not the problem you think it is.
Civilization can only be maintained when the populace has a high enough IQ to be trustworthy and competent. Jackson doesn't have that anymore. It's a case of demographic change from civilization makers to civilization despoilers. Like Detroit.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, yes. A lot of people are going to die. No argument about that.
No kidding! (Score:3)
REALLY? Clean/safe water and air are endangered you say?
Honestly, our 'emergency plan' for gulf coast state residents that get displaced could be "bus them to state X, put up temporary to permanent housing, figure the rest out while people DON'T DIE" and it would be better than everything we've been doing.
Unlike the rest of the NIMBYs in my neighborhood, I'd loan out the back 1/2 (.2acre) of my lot to set up temporary 2-family shelter/sanitation and rotate people through . . . yeah, I'm one of those "do unto others" kooks.