While residents lined up at distribution sites and grocery
stores in Jackson for bottled water, the city said "significant
gains" had been made overnight in repairing the O.B. Curtis
Water Plant. Complications from recent floodwaters knocked the
plant offline on Monday night.
"There are some challenges remaining to navigate over the next
few days, but the outlook for today is currently continued
progress," the city said in a statement. It said limited water
pressure had returned to some areas.
Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves said 600 members of the
National Guard would be deployed to the new water distribution
sites through the city and surrounding area of 180,000 affected
people.
"To everyone in the city, I know that you are dealing with a
profoundly unfair situation. It's frustrating. It's wrong. It
needs to be fixed," Reeves said during a news conference.
The crisis has hobbled Jackson. Many stores and restaurants have
shut, while the public school system and Jackson State
University have been forced to move classes online.
"I have me and six kids here. I have to constantly remind them,
'Do not brush your teeth with that water, do not wash your face
with that water,'" said Denika Samuel, who was at home helping
her children with remote schooling.
"Me as a parent, I'm going to do whatever it takes for us to
survive during this water crisis."
Since the plant failed on Monday, crews have raced to install a
temporary pump and make repairs and adjustments to existing
equipment.
President Joe Biden's administration approved an emergency
declaration late on Tuesday to free up federal assistance, while
the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Environmental
Protection Agency had been sent to Jackson to assist.
The White House also said legislation it supported has made
millions of federal dollars available for state and city water
projects.
"We've offered every single thing available to Mississippi. The
governor has to act," Biden told reporters at the White House
late on Thursday. "There's money to deal with this problem.
We've given them EPA. We've given them everything there is to
offer."
(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago, Rich McKay
in Atlanta and Daniel Trotta in Carlsbad, Calif.; editing by
Deepa Babington, Robert Birsel)
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