Politics

Jackson’s Mayor Wanted To Create The ‘Most Radical’ City On Earth. Now They Have No Drinking Water

REUTERS/Jonathan Bachman

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Laurel Duggan Social Issues and Culture Reporter
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Chokwe Antar Lumumba, Democratic mayor of Jackson, Mississippi, promised to make the capital “the most radical city on the planet” during his 2017 campaign, but so far he’s been unable to even solve even the city’s basic infrastructure problems and the city’s running water is now unsafe to drink.

He campaigned on plans to introduce universal basic income and alternatives to policing, to replace vacant lots with urban farms and to resolve chronic issues with the city’s water and roads in order to break the “cycles of humiliation” he said black residents experience in Jackson, the most heavily black large city in the U.S. Instead, the city’s water problems have worsened, and Republican Gov. Tate Reeves declared a state of emergency Tuesday because running water is not reliably available nor safe for consumption.

The city-run O.B. Curtis Water Plant has been plagued with issues for years and has  issued numerous boil water notices, but recent flooding impeded its ability to offer reliable running water to 180,000 Jackson residents. The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) will be distributing water from tanker trucks at various points throughout the city, Lumumba told CNN. (RELATED: What The Media Ignores About The Abortion Law At Center Of Major Supreme Court Case, According To Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves)

“I wouldn’t call us the most radical city to date,” Lumumba told Politico in 2021 amid a separate city water crisis.

Lumumba did not respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.

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