Unique Quality Products
Call for Federal Action to Prevent a U.S. Water Crisis
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Sponsor: The Rainforest Site
Over two million people lack basic indoor plumbing in one of the wealthiest countries on earth. Take action to ensure that everyone has access to clean water and adequate sanitation!
The United States is facing a growing water crisis that is jeopardizing the health of U.S. residents and the country’s surface, ground, and well water. The recent derailment of a train loaded with toxic chemicals in Ohio1, which released and burned vinyl chloride2, a known cancer-causing compound, killed thousands of fish in nearby streams3.
The lack of access to clean drinking water, sanitary bathrooms, and treated wastewater is an ongoing emergency for many parts of the U.S.4 Communities across the country are facing major threats to their clean water supply, and these issues disproportionately affect indigenous, less educated, older, and poorer communities.
The American Society of Civil Engineering’s 2021 Report Card for America’s Infrastructure assigned a dismal D+ grade to the country’s more than 16,000 wastewater treatment plants, a significant fraction of which have reached or exceeded their design capacities5. The U.S. drinking water infrastructure earned only a marginally better rating, with a C-grade6.
Extreme weather events, worsened by global warming, are exacerbating infrastructure failures, and the cost of failing to update the country’s aging and deteriorating drinking water and wastewater infrastructure could lead to trillions lost in preventable diseases, higher medical costs, lost productivity, and environmental pollution.
There is also a disproportionate impact of environmental racism on communities of color7. These communities require sustained attention, investment, and action to reverse the decades of damage. Federal action is beginning to address the issue. Nearly $800 million in federal funds have been earmarked for water projects in Jackson8. The Closing America’s Wastewater Access Gap Community Initiative, piloted in Lowndes County, will tackle ten other underserved communities where residents lack basic wastewater management9. The federal Inflation Reduction Act also provided $550 million for water systems in disadvantaged communities10.
Access to clean water and adequate sanitation is a human right, and it is the responsibility of the government to ensure that this right is upheld. Help us call on the Environmental Protection Agency to take immediate action to address these issues by implementing policies that will ensure access to clean water and wastewater management throughout the country.
Sign the petition and protect Americans, wildlife, and the environment from the impending clean water crisis!