
Ending water shutoffs
If everyone can’t wash their hands frequently, then we can’t stop coronavirus. Period.
If everyone can’t wash their hands frequently, then we can’t stop coronavirus. Period.
Too many people across the country can’t wash their hands because their water service is turned off. This endangers all of us, especially when the most widely endorsed strategy to prevent or manage the coronavirus (COVID-19) is to wash our hands frequently.
Water must be turned on for everyone, right now, for the safety of the entire country. That’s why we’re pushing both Congress in their stimulus package and Governors at the state level — demanding that they stop all water shutoffs and enact long-term solutions that will ensure our water systems are funded.
This emergency has proven one thing: Withholding water costs lives and it’s time our representatives stepped up to protect us.
Two Easy Things You Can Do Right Now To Help Stop Water Shutoffs During Coronavirus
Here are two immediate ways to do something about water shutoffs in your community and nationwide.
1. Tell President Biden: No water shutoffs during a pandemic!
By taking action you can be a part of the amazing response from people all across the US demanding water shutoffs in their state and around the country. Together with 53,000 of our supporters signing on to our actions, we’ve:
You can check to see every city, state, and utility that has taken action to provide water for all on our public spreadsheet with live updates.
Some states have been responding faster than others. Here’s are some of the top grassroots movements that have formed to push for water justice during the pandemic:
Washington State: Governor Inslee does the right thing in Washington state.
Maryland: Groups urge Baltimore Mayor Young to suspend water shutoffs for 180 days.
Pennsylvania: Governor Wolf must stop water shutoffs in Pennsylvania.
Ohio: Ohio passes legislation strongly supporting rights to water — now Governor DeWine MUST sign it.
New Jersey: Governor Murphy pushes utilities to stop shutoffs in New Jersey.
Here is more of our analysis around the need for an immediate suspension of water shutoffs.
Coronavirus has brought a major warning about our water.
House Democrats urge state and local governments to suspend water shutoffs and restore water.
We need a national ban on water shutoffs!
Our efforts are starting to work, but we need to keep pushing. Consider becoming a monthly donor to support fights like this one. We need your help to keep pushing!
Help support our campaigns, like keeping the water on for families nationwide. Become a monthly donor now!
Water has always been crucial to our survival. But the coming challenges from climate chaos and new diseases are about to put it into sharp perspective, and hopefully we can protect water in time.
COVID-19, or the new coronavirus disease, is affecting our nation and world in major ways. Between school and workplace closings, mandatory lockdowns in some places, a panicked run on grocery stores, and the burden on hospitals which are not equipped with enough supplies to help everyone who will need it, the coronavirus is showing us just how vulnerable we are.
But with climate chaos nipping at our heels, coronavirus might just be the first of new viruses, or prehistoric ones, coming at us. Pair that with major threats to our water sources, like fracking, and it becomes clear we need to act now to protect our future.
Without running water for everyone, fighting the new coronavirus disease is impossible. Food & Water Watch demands a nationwide moratorium on water shutoffs and rapid restoration of water service for all people. Our leaders need to make sure water is turned back on in households where it’s been shut off for non-payment. Without water, people can not wash their hands to combat the spread of the coronavirus.
Support the WATER Act by urging your member of Congress to support it!
Coronavirus is showing our nation the importance of universal access to water. Decades of federal underinvestment in water infrastructure has caused a water affordability crisis in our country. Let this moment prove the critical urgency of revamping our water systems. Congress must pass the Water Affordability, Transparency, Equity and Reliability (WATER) Act, dedicating $35 billion a year to help repair drinking water and sewage systems, while also creating almost 1 million jobs. It is a crucial step to proactively improve our water infrastructure and make access universal.
Safe water is non-negotiable. Access to affordable service is non-negotiable. Clean drinking water is a human right — people shouldn’t have to worry about whether their water is safe to drink or whether they can wash their hands.
We need dedicated funding to keep our water systems up-to-date and affordable, protecting our water for generations to come.
Senator Bernie Sanders (VT) and Representatives Brenda Lawrence (MI) and Ro Khanna (CA) introduced legislation that will help fix our aging water systems and ensure that every person has access to safe, clean water. And the Congressional Progressive Caucus unanimously endorsed the WATER Act on October 1, 2019.
Now is the moment to call for federal action. In fact, today is World Water Day, an annual holiday designed to highlight the connection between water and public health. Let’s honor it by calling on Congress to pass the WATER Act to ensure every person in our country has safe water.
Warmer air holds more water than cooler air. As our planet warms, so changes our water cycles. Wildfires, supercharged hurricanes, flooding, drought, agricultural anomalies, rising sea levels, emerging viruses — our survival in all of these areas hinges on how we are protecting our planet and the water that’s on it.
We must rewrite that water story for future generations — a story where the ones who came before them acted in time to preserve this precious resource.
It turns out, fracking is even more of a water hog than many realized, even those of us critical of it from the beginning. A Duke study showed that not only was fracking sucking up more water than the industry told us, but that much of it was forever unusable and untreatable afterward.
The study found:
There has been no practice of water treatment that returns this water to usable condition for humans — and at this scale, one can reason that unless fracking is stopped, it’s on pace to severely impact U.S. water sources.
Add this on top of the fact that fracking and fossil fuels are largely responsible for climate change, and we can see that fracking is one of humanity’s number one enemies that must be stopped.
Food & Water Watch and its members battle the corporations stealing water, polluting water, and causing climate change. We expose their playbook through our research and we organize community members to stop these predators. We’ve done this work for fifteen years, and shoulder to shoulder with you we will continue this work until our water is safe from these threats. Will you support The WATER Act to protect our water future?
Send Congress a message to show your support for the WATER Act.