2021.11.11
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A water meter cover in Los Angeles, California. Photo © J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue

Households Still Have Not Received Aid from New Federal Water Bill Assistance Program


Congress set aside $1.1 billion to pay for past-due water bills. Today, households still haven't received the funds.⁠

Last December, spurred by household financial distress due to the pandemic, Congress authorized the first-ever federal program to help low-income residents pay overdue water bills. Lawmakers provided $638 million to set up the program and assist households with their water debt.⁠

Four months later, in March 2021, federal lawmakers doubled down on the approach. They added $500 million to the pot, an addition that brought total funding to more than $1.1 billion for the Low-Income Household Water Assistance Program, or LIHWAP, as it came to be called.⁠

Today, households are still waiting. Those versed in the workings of federal benefits programs and water utility operations knew that starting a new initiative, even one modeled after a federal aid program for energy bills, would not be a quick and simple task.⁠

HotSpots H2O: World Spending on Climate Adaptation Must Increase Five- or Tenfold

The world doesn’t spend nearly enough adapting to the risks of climate change, a U.N. report found.⁠

According to the U.N Environment Program’s Adaptation Gap report, there is a huge gulf between what communities are spending to prepare for rising seas and ferocious droughts and what they ought to spend. This gap is widening, as the costs of climate adaptation increase due to rising global temperatures.⁠

A growing body of scientific research shows that even if society were to halt emissions overnight, a certain amount of atmospheric warming—and accompanying environmental risks—would still occur. National commitments made last week at the COP26 climate conference to cut heat-trapping greenhouse gas emissions would warm the planet by 1.8 degrees Celsius, according to the International Energy Agency. That is more ambitious than earlier pledges, but it still exceeds the Paris agreement goal of 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels. ⁠

As a result, climate adaptation looms large over the ongoing U.N. climate conference in Glasgow, where the report was released. Global climate finance has emerged as a key tension, as many vulnerable nations say they simply do not have the resources to curb emissions or adapt to climate change absent financial support. The Covid-19 pandemic has only added strain on the most vulnerable.⁠

What’s Up With Water – November 8, 2021

For the news you need to start the week, tune into “What’s Up With Water” fresh on Monday’s on iTunesSpotifyiHeart Radio, and SoundCloud.

Featured coverage from this week's episode of What's Up With Water looks at: 

  • At the UN climate conference last week, Colombian officials said they would declare 30 percent of the country as protected land by next year.
  • In the United States, Google and an Oregon city in which it operates are working to keep Google’s water consumption out of the public eye. 
This week, Circle of Blue reports on how climate change is gripping trout streams across the United States.
From Circle of Blue's Archives: 

Rebecca Fritz opens her past-due bill from the City of Detroit Water and Sewerage Department. © J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue

Circle of Blue Investigates: Water Debt


Most Americans give little thought to their water bills, paying them on time and in full. But for a subset of people in this country, water debt is a constant and menacing presence in their lives. Circle of Blue investigated the scale of customer water debt burdens in large U.S. cities.
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