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Stirring the Waters Inside Appalachia: How Drinking Water Systems Are Failing Rural Residents

Jesse Wright, WVPB

For many families in parts of eastern Kentucky and southern West Virginia, the absence of clean, reliable drinking water has become part of daily life.

This week on Inside Appalachia we’ll hear from folks like Blaine Taylor, a 17-year-old resident of Martin County, Kentucky, who struggles to manage basic hygiene when his water comes out with sendiment in it.

“I had to use a case of water last night just to get enough water in my bathtub just to get myself cleaned up for today at school,” he said. “It’s rough.”

Credit Jessica Lilly, WVPB

In 2015, Inside Appalachia reported that water districts in central Appalachia struggle to perform routine maintenance, which leads to quality and reliability problems for customers. Sometimes, districts are understaffed and underfunded. The repairs they do make are often inadequate -- and fail to address the long-term problems of water loss and crumbling service lines.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting reporter Molly Born, Caity Coyne, from the Charleston Gazette-Mail, and Will Wright, from the Lexington Herald-Leader, spent part of 2018 looking into this issue for a project called Stirring the Waters. They were working through the Report for America initiative, a national service program made possible in rural Appalachia with support from the Galloway Family Foundation.

They discovered West Virginia would need $17 billion to connect hundreds of systems across the state to centralized utility services — both water and sewer. That’s according to the West Virginia Infrastructure and Jobs Development Council. The council is responsible for approving and overseeing infrastructure projects in the state. That’s more than the entire 2018 state budget. By the end of 2017, only $8.5 million dollars were secured for the projects — just more than 1 percent of the necessary funds.

Credit Jessica Lilly, WVPB
Jared Brewster stands outside of a dated water system in McDowell County.

We'll also follow a group of graduate students from the University of Pennsylvania, who recently toured water plants in McDowell County hoping to help find a solution to the problem.

Read more stories and learn more about the Stirring the Waters project here.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting will be working with the Report for America Project again in 2019. We’re taking applications for a reporter based in Charleston, West Virginia, who will cover the southern part of the state, including state government. The deadline to apply is Feb. 8, 2019.

Music in today’s show was provided by Dinosaur Burps, Blue Dot Sessionsand Ben Townsend.

A special thanks to Report for America corps members Caity Coyne and Will Wright, and former corps member Molly Born, as well as the Charleston Gazette-Mail, Lexington Herald-Leader and GroundTruth staff members who made the Stirring the Waters project possible.

Our host is Jessica Lilly. Molly Born guest-produced the show this week, with help from associate producer Eric Douglas. Our executive producer is Jesse Wright. He also edited the show this week. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens.

You can find us on Twitter @InAppalachia.

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Former Southern W.Va. Bureau Chief, Reporter/Producer
Former Reporter/Producer for Inside Appalachia, @RoxyMTodd
News Director, edouglas@wvpublic.org, 304-556-4946, @AppalachiaEric