Opinion: First-class society would rebuild water system
By Bob Herbert, New York Times
If you had a leak in your roof or in the kitchen or basement, you’d probably think it a good idea to have it taken care of before matters got worse, and more expensive.
If only we had the same attitude when it comes to the vast and intricately linked water systems in the United States. Most of us take clean and readily available water for granted. But the truth is that the nation’s water systems are in sorry shape — deteriorating even as the population grows and demand increases.
Aging and corroded pipes are bursting somewhere every couple of minutes. Dilapidated sewer systems are contaminating waterways and drinking water. Many local systems are so old and inadequate — in some cases, so utterly rotten — that they are overwhelmed by heavy rain.
As Charles Duhigg reported in the Times last March: “For decades, these systems — some built around the time of the Civil War — have been ignored by politicians and residents accustomed to paying almost nothing for water delivery and sewage removal. And so each year, hundreds of thousands of ruptures damage streets and homes and cause dangerous pollutants to seep into drinking water supplies.”
The Continental natural gas lines,fuel lines,and electrical grids are all in the same shape, but no ones doing a thing about it.The country could use more than a few new refineries to knock off the BS repair jobs that control fuel prices.
They could put 1000’s to work if they spent money in the right spot, instead funding wars,military weapons,welfare,ear marked cash to both parties for nonsense spending.
There’s no reason why this city should have a water problem,(unions are the blame there),for years Harvey’s drew it’s water directly from the lake,we could do the same, CUT COST, tastes better than anything that Spud could ever dream of pumping.