NY Times, Oct. 2 2014
Thirst Turns to Desperation in Rural California
By JENNIFER MEDINA

PORTERVILLE, Calif. — After a nine-hour day working at a citrus packing 
plant, her body covered in a sheen of fruit wax and dust, there is 
nothing Angelica Gallegos wants more than a hot shower, with steam to 
help clear her throat and lungs.

“I can just picture it, that feeling of finally being clean — really 
refreshed and clean,” Ms. Gallegos, 37, said one recent evening.

But she has not had running water for more than five months — nor is 
there any tap water in her near future — because of a punishing and 
relentless drought in California. In the Gallegos household and more 
than 500 others in Tulare County, residents cannot flush a toilet, fill 
a drinking glass, wash dishes or clothes, or even rinse their hands 
without reaching for a bottle or bucket.

Even more so than the Okies who came here fleeing the Dust Bowl of the 
1930s, the people now living on this parched land are stuck. “We don’t 
have the money to move, and who would buy this house without water?” 
said Ms. Gallegos, who grew up in the area and shares a tidy mobile home 
with her husband and two daughters. “When you wake up in the middle of 
the night sick to your stomach, you have to think about where the water 
bottle is before you can use the toilet.”

Now in its third year, the state’s record-breaking drought is being felt 
in many ways: vanishing lakes and rivers, lost agricultural jobs, 
fallowed farmland, rising water bills, suburban yards gone brown. But 
nowhere is the situation as dire as in East Porterville, a small rural 
community in Tulare County where life’s daily routines have been 
completely upended by the drying of wells and, in turn, the 
disappearance of tap water.

“Everything has changed,” said Yolanda Serrato, 54, who has spent most 
of her life here. Until this summer, the lawn in front of her immaculate 
three-bedroom home was a lush green, with plants dotting the perimeter. 
As her neighbors’ wells began running dry, Ms. Serrato warned her three 
children that they should cut down on hourlong showers, but they mostly 
rebuffed her. “They kept saying, ‘No, no, Mama, you’re just too 
negative,’  ” she said.

Then the sink started to sputter. These days, the family of five relies 
on a water tank in front of their home that they received through a 
local charity. The sole neighbor with a working well allows them to hook 
up to his water at night, saving them from having to use buckets to 
flush toilets in the middle of the night. On a recent morning, there was 
still a bit of the neighbor’s well water left, trickling out the kitchen 
faucet, taking over 10 minutes to fill two three-quart pots.

“You don’t think of water as privilege until you don’t have it anymore,” 
said Ms. Serrato, whose husband works in the nearby fields. “We were 
very proud of making a life here for ourselves, for raising children 
here. We never ever expected to live this way.”

Like Ms. Serrato, the vast majority of residents here in the Sierra 
Nevada foothills are Mexican immigrants, drawn to the state’s Central 
Valley to work in the expansive agricultural fields. Many here have 
spent lifetimes scraping together money to buy their own small slice of 
land, often with a mobile home sitting on top. Hundreds of these homes 
are hooked to wells that are treated as private property: When the water 
is there, it is solely controlled by owners. Because the land is 
unincorporated, it is not part of a municipal water system, and 
connecting to one would be prohibitively expensive.

The Gallegos family’s drinking water comes only from bottles, mostly 
received through donations but sometimes bought at the gas station. For 
showering, washing dishes and flushing toilets, the family relies on 
buckets filled with water from a tank set in the front lawn, which Mr. 
Gallegos replenishes every other day at the county fire station. Often, 
the water runs out before he returns home from his job as a mechanic, 
forcing Ms. Gallegos to wait for hours before she can clean.

The family has spent hundreds of dollars to wash their clothes at the 
laundromat and on paper goods to avoid washing dishes. Ms. Gallegos 
recently told her 10-year-old daughter that there was no money left to 
pay for her after-school cheerleading club.

The local high school has begun allowing students to arrive early and 
shower there. Parents often keep their children home from school if they 
have not bathed, worried that they could lose custody if the authorities 
deem the students too dirty, a rumor that county officials have tried to 
dismiss. Mothers who normally take pride in their home-cooked meals now 
rely on canned and fast food, because washing fresh vegetables uses too 
much water.

Ms. Serrato and others receive help from a local charity organization, 
the Porterville Area Coordinating Council, which opens its doors each 
weekday morning to hand out water. A whiteboard displays the 
distribution system: Families of four receive three cases of bottled 
water and two gallon jugs, families of six get four cases and four 
gallon jugs, and so on.

For months, families called county and state officials asking what they 
should do when their water ran out, only to be told that there was no 
public agency that could help them.

“Nobody knows where to go, who to talk to: These aren’t people who rely 
on government to help,” said Donna Johnson, 72, an East Porterville 
resident whose own well went dry in July. As she began learning that 
hundreds of her neighbors were also out of water, she used her own money 
to buy gallons of water, handed them out of her truck and compiled a 
list of those in need. County officials rely on her list as the most 
complete snapshot of who needs help; dozens are added each day. “It’s a 
slow-moving disaster that nobody knows how to handle,” Ms. Johnson said.

State officials say that at least 700 households have no access to 
running water, but they acknowledge that there could be hundreds more, 
with many rural well-owners not knowing whom to contact. Tulare County, 
just south of Fresno, recently began aggressively tracking homes without 
running water, delivering bottles to hundreds of homes and offering 
applications for biweekly water deliveries, using private donations and 
money from a state grant. In August, the county placed a 5,000-gallon 
tank of water in front of a fire station on Lake Success Road, and plans 
to add a second soon. A sign in English and Spanish declares, “Do not 
use for drinking,” but officials suspect that many do.

“We will give people water as long as we have it, but the truth is, we 
don’t really know how long that will be,” said Andrew Lockman, who leads 
the Tulare County Office of Emergency Services. “We can’t offer anyone a 
long-term solution right now. There is a massive gap between need and 
resources to deal with it.”

_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to