$54 A MONTH FOR WATER YOU CAN'T DRINK
By David Bacon
New America Media, 8/22/11
http://newamericamedia.org/2011/08/dying-for-a-glass-of-clean-water-in-cas-san-joaquin-valley.php

LANARE, CA - When Mary Broad moved to Lanare in 1955, there were only 
four other families still living in this tiny, unincorporated 
community in the middle of the San Joaquin Valley, halfway between 
old Highway 99 and Interstate 5 on the cracked blacktop of Mt. 
McKinley Avenue. 



It wasn't always this way.  Lanare used to be a company town, taking 
its name from rancher and speculator LA Nares, one of the last of a 
string of speculators from the east who became owners of the old 
Spanish land grants - in his case, the Rancho Laguna de Tache.  From 
1912 to 1925 the town had a post office and a station on the Laton 
and Western Railway.

Lanare and its neighbors drew their water and life from the Kings 
River.  The next town up the road even changed its name from Liberty 
Settlement to Riverdale to advertise its proximity.  But through the 
first half of the 1900s, farmers tapped the Kings in the Sierras to 
the east, to irrigate the San Joaquin Valley's vineyards, orchards 
and cotton fields.  Instead of flowing into the valley past Lanare 
and Riverdale, in most years the stretch below the mountains became a 
dry riverbed.  Eventually Tulare Lake, the river's terminus, itself 
was drained for farmland and disappeared. 



So, almost, did Lanare.  Its people left, and only a few families 
remained.  But in California's housing crunch of the last few 
decades, Lanare began to grow again.  For farm laborers, truck 
drivers and poor rural working families, living in Lanare was cheaper 
than urban Fresno fifty miles away. 

But for these new residents, the dry riverbed and a century of using 
its water for irrigation have spelled bad news.  Today Lanare's water 
comes from a well.  And in this low-lying area of the San Joaquin 
Valley, chemicals have become concentrated in the water table.  It 
was no surprise, therefore, that residents discovered their water had 
high levels of arsenic, a poison.  Since then, their effort to find 
water they can drink has been a search for the life of their town 
itself.



By 2000 Lanare had 540 residents.  A decade later, 589.  People 
mostly moved into trailers.  Because most are farm workers in the 
surrounding fields, a third live under the poverty line, with half 
the men making less than $22,000 per year, and half the women less 
than $16,000.

Today Lanare is one of the many unincorporated communities in rural 
California that lack the most basic services, like drinking water, 
sewers, and even sidewalks and streetlights.  According to Policy 
Link, a foundation promoting economic and social equity, "Throughout 
the United States, millions of people live outside of central cities 
on pockets of unincorporated land. Predominantly African-American and 
Latino, and frequently low-income, these communities ... have been 
excluded from city borders."



Three years ago, Policy Link partnered with California Rural Legal 
Assistance to create the Community Equity Initiative, to find answers 
to the critical situation of Lanare residents and others like them. 
The San Joaquin Valley alone is home to more than 220 unincorporated 
communities, with an estimated population of almost half a million.

In 2002 Lanare residents got a $1.3 million grant from the Federal 
government to build a plant to remove the arsenic.  But after it went 
on line five years later, it only ran for six months.  After that, 
the community's residents no longer had enough money for the 
chemicals and power to keep it going.  Even shut down, however, they 
still have to come up with $54 every month to cover that loan, paying 
basically for water they can't drink.  Inside every home there's a 
faucet with water you might risk using to wash dishes or clothes. 
But when Angel Hernandez or Isabel Solorio hold up a glass to the 
light, the water is cloudy.  So in the corner are the stacks of water 
bottles for drinking and cooking. 



In the summer heat, on the border between Fresno and Merced Counties, 
the temperature rises to over 100 degrees.  Water is no luxury.  It 
sustains life.  Everyone has to drink enough to replace what their 
bodies lose, even those like Mary Broad, who sits in the shade of her 
porch most days.

Dozens of similar small communities, or colonias, spread out across 
the state have similar water problems.  Activists in 17 
unincorporated areas of next-door Tulare County formed AGUA, La 
Asociacion de la Gente Unida por el Agua (The Association of People 
United for Water).



In Lanare, Hernandez, Solorio and several other residents, including 
Juventino Gonzalez and Jesus Medina, organized a group to press the 
state to take responsibility for providing water, Comunidad Unida en 
Lanare (Community United in Lanare).  As a first step, they asked the 
state to survey Lanare and surrounding communities, acknowledge that 
such a need exists, and make a plan to meet it.  California Rural 
Legal Assistance filed suit on their behalf last year, saying 
California's Safe Drinking Water Act requires the state to formulate 
a Safe Drinking Water Plan. 

The state hasn't come up with a Safe Drinking Water Plan since 1993. 
CRLA attorneys point out that if authorities had followed the law and 
come up with one,, it would have been obvious that this poor small 
community could not have afforded to operate an expensive arsenic 
treatment plant.    Letting the state off the hook, however, a local 
Fresno County judge ruled that California's budget crisis trumped its 
obligation to create such a plan. 



The state budget crisis, however, hasn't stopped nearby Riverdale, 
only four miles from Lanare, from proposing another arsenic removal 
plant.  The Riverdale Public Utilities District hopes to use funds 
from Proposition 84, a $5.4 billion water bond.  It was just awarded 
$500,000 for a preliminary study for a project that would break 
ground next year. 

CRLA lawyer Phoebe Seaton wrote to the state health department, 
saying that, "Given finite and scarce state and federal resources, 
the need for a safe, reliable and affordable source of water for both 
Lanare and Riverdale, and the Department's statutory duty to explore 
consolidation of water systems, the Department must consider the 
consolidation of Lanare's and Riverdale's water systems." 



Public health officials, however, say connecting Lanare to that 
Riverdale plant, or even expanding Lanare's own idle plant, would be 
too expensive.  The state has hired a private contractor to operate 
the Lanare plant, but the operation is in receivership, and it hasn't 
produced water anyone can drink for four years.  When the Public 
Health Department wouldn't say whether Lanare was included in its 
plan, Comunidad Unida began working with Fresno's Local Agency 
Formation Commission, which is charged with avoiding expensive 
duplication of municipal and county services, including water. 

In a report due to be released on August 24, Executive Officer Jeff 
Witts notes that "residents are currently relying on failing septic 
tanks for wastewater services, there are no streetlights, sidewalks, 
and there is no adequate storm water drainage.  The levels of poverty 
in Lanare make it that much more important that residents have access 
to an affordable source of drinking water."  The LAFCo report 
concludes that "A shared arsenic treatment facility that serves both 
Riverdale and Lanare would provide operational efficiencies and 
economies of scale that would improve service, water quality and 
affordable access to clean water for both communities."   It even 
advocates a system to allow Lanare residents to abandon their failing 
septic tanks, and connect to the sewers of Riverdale.



Meanwhile, however, the water in Lanare still looks cloudy, and 
residents fear drinking it.  And they still pay $54 a month for it. 
"The government has forgotten us - they live outside our reality," 
says Juventino Gonzalez, who moved to Lanare 41 years ago, when it 
only had 12 families.  "All that time we've been isolated from the 
larger communities around us, while our neighborhood gets filled with 
drugs and trash.  Water's just one problem, but if we can find an 
answer to it, maybe we can solve others too.  We're willing to try 
almost anything."




For more articles and images, see  http://dbacon.igc.org

See also Illegal People -- How Globalization Creates Migration and 
Criminalizes Immigrants  (Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2002

See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575

See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the U.S./Mexico Border 
(University of California, 2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html
-- 
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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