2022.11.03
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A Detroit resident displays a past-due water bill. Photo © J. Carl Ganter/Circle of Blue

Slow to Start, Federal Water Bill Assistance Program Ramps Up

 

It wasn’t expected to be quick and easy. And it hasn’t been, not with the staffing and technical challenges inherent to starting a new government benefit program.

But the rollout of the first federally funded program to assist low-income households with their water bills is gaining speed, observers say. Still, it is agonizingly slow for a program that was marketed as an emergency response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

States, tribes, and territories have received the $1.1 billion that Congress allocated 20 months ago to the Low-Income Household Water Assistance Program, or LIHWAP. Now the challenge is ensuring that the funds reach people in need.

Photo © J. Carl Ganter / Circle of Blue
 

What’s Up With Water – November 1, 2022

Tune into What's Up With Water for your need to know news of the world's water on Apple PodcastsSpotifyiHeartRadio, and SoundCloud.

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

  • In Europe, new threats of pollution to waterways have compelled government officials to take action. The European Union’s executive branch proposed stricter pollution limits for rivers, lakes, and groundwater, along with stronger controls for handling wastewater. The European Commission made several moves to protect ecosystems and human health from chemical and biological contaminants.
  • Russia’s war against Ukraine has caused collateral damage to water delivery and sewage systems in Ukraine. Some of that destruction appears to have been intentional. The BBC investigated accusations that Russian forces sabotaged a water supply pipeline in the southern Ukrainian city of Mykolaiv. Nearly 500,000 people live there, and for the past six months have been without reliable drinking water in their homes.
  • Ukraine is one of many places where access to safe drinking water is in doubt. The world continues to fall short of a goal to provide safe water and sanitation to every person by 2030. About two billion people still lack clean water, and many of those without safe water live in sub-Saharan Africa. That assessment is part of a report from the World Health Organization, the World Bank, and UNICEF.
From the Archives: 

Cecily McClellan is co-founder of We the People of Detroit and directs the “water works” program, which provides water to Detroit area residents who can’t afford it. “When people can’t afford water, it becomes a health issue,” she said, “that affects the most vulnerable, especially young mothers.” Photo: J. Carl Ganter/ Circle of Blue

The questions — the mental calculations for basic needs — are relentless. Can she go another day or two without doing laundry? Do those dishes need to be cleaned now or can they wait until tomorrow or the next day? 

Water conservation is a constant negotiation for Summer, a 58-year-old Oak Park resident. Unlike for most people, it’s also a survival strategy.

Summer said she has to be stingy with water to make her monthly budget pencil out. Water, sewer, stormwater, and garbage collection are all part of the same bill. To keep it in the $120 range she washes clothes once a week, sometimes every other week. She receives a fixed income from disability payments. With all her other bills, waste is a luxury she can’t afford. 

“Well, it is stressful, of course, because you can’t really live a functional life without water,” said Summer, who did not want her real name to be used in order to keep her personal struggles private. “And you know, it puts you in a scary place, a stressful place, where you’re concerned that your water’s going to go off and if it goes off, you’re going to have to pay all of the reconnection fees.”

Water rates are rising across Michigan as communities undertake long-needed upgrades to hobbled water, sewer, and drainage systems. These are necessary investments for the state’s future that nonetheless are exposing Summer and other low-income households to financial stress. 

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