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Water, Sanitation, and Climate Change in the United States Series, Part 2

Alexandra Cambell-Ferrari, Shannon McNeeley, Morgan Shimabuku, Luke Wilson | October 15th, 2024


In the United States, federal, tribal, state, and local laws and policies exist to govern the provision of water and sanitation services to communities and homes. The laws are designed to ensure the protection of public health and the environment; deliver sufficient, safe water for drinking, bathing, cooking, and other household needs; and remove and treat domestic (i.e., household) waste. People without complete plumbing or safe water live within the “water access gap.” As explored in the first report in this series, climate change—from extreme temperatures to droughts, floods, extreme storms, and wildfires—is making it hard to close this gap and keep it from growing. Water and sanitation systems in frontline communities already feel the disproportionate “first and worst” impacts of climate change to these systems and to their access to water and sanitation. Laws and policies should help anticipate and plan  or the incremental and catastrophic impacts of climate change and protect those most harmed by the effects. Unfortunately, in most cases, the climate is changing faster than the law can respond, thereby leaving frontline communities’ water and sanitation systems vulnerable to damage or destruction.

This is part two in the three-part Water, Sanitation, and Climate Change in the United States series. Click here for part one and here for part three.

Keywords

disadvantaged communities (DACs), drinking water, flood management, risk assessment, sanitation, wastewater