“It’s still safe to take a bath in running water. However, make sure you don’t open your mouth in the shower,” Jim Craig, Mississippi Health Administration Director, told the locals. He also emphasized that pets should not drink tap water. Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves stated that he is “not 100 percent sure that the result will work,” trying to fix the malfunction in the mechanism that measures the pH value of water in water facilities in Jackson.
WARNING DO NOT DRINK WATER WITHOUT BOILING
“There will be outages in the future. The problem is unavoidable at this point,” Reevers said of Jackson’s water supply system, which has been in trouble for years. He asked the residents of the region not to drink the water without boiling it.
Local residents complained that they could not get clean water service for more than a month, that they could not afford to buy bottled water, and that they had to wait in long queues for free water distributed at some points.
It was shared that public schools in Jackson have switched to virtual education since Tuesday due to the water crisis, and portable showers and toilets have been installed throughout the campus at Jackson State University.
“THESE CRISES ARE NOT A COINCIDENCE”
US writer Keith Boykin said on Twitter that the infrastructure problem in cities with a black majority in the US is “not a coincidence”.
“Once again, another black city is facing a water crisis. 83 percent of Jackson-Mississippi, 54 percent of Flint-Michigan,” the author of the book “Race Against Time: The Politics of a Darkening America” shared. black.” He drew attention to the water crisis in both cities.
The black writer writes, “These crises are not accidental. They result from deliberate neglect of black and other non-white communities.” used the phrase.
President Joe Biden declared a state of emergency for the water crisis in Jackson, and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Administrator Deanne Criswell was reported to be in Jackson on Friday.
After a severe winter storm in February 2021, the water supply pipes in Jackson froze to burst, leaving some residents without water for a month. (AA)