Community Water Center

Community-driven water solutions through organizing, education, and advocacy

EPA head laments lack of clean water in San Joaquin Valley

 


On November 20, 2013, members of the AGUA coalition and CWC allies hosted an environmental justice tour in Orange Center for the head of the US EPA.

By Tony Barboza and Jessica Garrison
LA Times

https://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-1122-epa-administrator-20131122,0,1131346.story#ixzz2mLzgHFpy

(11/21/2013) The head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said Thursday that she was disappointed by the slow progress state, federal and local governments have made in bringing potable drinking water to small towns in the San Joaquin Valley.

“We’ve got rural communities that don’t have clean water and there’s no plan on how to get it to them,” EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy said in a meeting with Los Angeles Times editors and reporters.

McCarthy’s comments follow the federal government’s threat this spring to cut off clean drinking water funding because state officials have been sitting on more than $455 million in unspent federal money. The EPA also faulted the state Department of Public Health for a lack of financial accountability with the funds.

Residents and activists in small communities across the state said they were forced to pay for bottled water as fixes to what came out of their pipes were delayed year after year because of red tape.

This summer, the state public health agency issued a 16-page plan to improve the distribution of federal money, including a pledge to distribute more than $800 million over the next three fiscal years — four times as much as in the last three.

McCarthy’s remarks came during a three-day visit to California, her first since taking over as the nation’s top environmental regulator in July. She also discussed the Obama administration’s push to battle climate change by regulating carbon dioxide emissions from new power plants and an upcoming rule that will assert the EPA’s jurisdiction over the nation’s water bodies under the Clean Water Act.

The EPA announced this week that it had awarded California $174 million in federal funding to invest in water infrastructure projects, including $79 million to the public health department for the drinking water fund.

“Things are looking up,” said Jennifer Clary, program associate for the group Clean Water Action. Still, she said, significant challenges remain for communities seeking potable water. The drinking water fund may not be spent on operations and maintenance of water infrastructure, so even if a town is able to install treatment systems, it could be prohibitively expensive to operate them.

McCarthy’s visit included stops in San Francisco and the Fresno area, where she met with farmers and activists about water and air quality concerns. On Thursday, she walked along the Los Angeles River with Mayor Eric Garcetti before touring the Port of Long Beach and a recycling facility in Wilmington.

The day before, McCarthy visited an elementary school in Orange Center, a community near Fresno that lacks a centralized water system or sewer system and is organizing to fix that. Well monitoring has shown high levels of nitrates and, in some cases, uranium. So for now, the school uses bottled water.

In an interview later Thursday, McCarthy said bringing safe drinking water to such communities should be a priority for all levels of government. The EPA, she said, has been working to “try to make sure that federal funds are spent wisely and focused well.”

“We need to make sure that the state implements effectively,” said Jared Blumenfeld, the EPA’s regional administrator. “I think they’re on track to do that.”

Experts have offered differing estimates of how many people in California do not have access to safe drinking water. Earlier this year, the state’s public health agency put the number at about 200,000 people at any one time who are served by a water system that violates state health standards. But some legislators say the number is as high as 2.1 million when communities not served by publicly regulated water systems are counted.

https://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-1122-epa-administrator-20131122,0,1131346.story#ixzz2mLzgHFpy

Like us to spread the word

Related News & Resources

Join us at AGUA's 10 year celebration

Join the AGUA Coalition as they celebrate their 10th year of advocacy and organizing to secure safe, clean and affordable water for all Californians! This celebration will be the final...

Gov. Jerry Brown's drought plan to help Valley towns

By Rick Montanez ABC 30 – KFSN-TV Fresno, CA http://abclocal.go.com/kfsn/story?section=news/state&id=9438102 (02/19/2014) FRESNO, Calif. — Communities around the Valley are facing ongoing water problems like contamination, on top of drought issues....

California's Lingering Drought and Pollution Defy Solutions

  Less snowmelt from Sierra Nevada leads to more pumping of Central Valley’s contaminated groundwater. By Jeremy MillerCircle of Blue https://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/2014/world/north-south-californias-scarcer-water-supply-mismanaged-use-defy-solutions/ (01/2014) FRESNO COUNTY, CA — In the early morning...

100+ Community Members Travel to Sacramento for Rally!

Yesterday was a powerful day with over 100 residents from the San Joaquin Valley traveling to Sacramento to share their experience with unsafe water and urge legislators to support the...

BACKERS OF SAFE AND AFFORDABLE DRINKING WATER FUND APPLAUD COMMITMENT BY GOVERNOR AND LEGISLATURE TO MOVE FORWARD TO ADDRESS STATE CRISIS

For Immediate Release Contact: Steven Maviglio, 916-607-8340 June 8, 2018 SACRAMENTO -- Supporters of a statewide Safe and Affordable Drinking Water Fund today applauded the commitment by Governor Jerry Brown,...

Rallies Held for Safe and Affordable Drinking Water in Bakersfield and Merced

Dolores Huerta joined community members as they traveled to Bakersfield on May 11th to urge support for the Safe and Affordable Drinking Water Fund. On Friday of National Drinking Water...

Safe and Affordable Drinking Water Fund Update

AGUA members traveled to Sacramento to meet with legislators and urge them to support the safe and affordable drinking water solutions. This week, San Joaquin Valley residents traveled to Sacramento...

California Budget Takes Steps to Address State’s Drinking Water Crisis

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 16, 2017 CONTACT: Dawn Van Dyke, (916) 447-2854 x 1011, [email protected] Jonathan Nelson, (530) 848-4460, [email protected] Advocates say they will continue to push for...

More News