Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2023
Journal / Book Title
Water
Abstract
While humans need water to survive, water can also efficiently transmit microbial diseases and heavy metals to consumers. Over 50,000 water violations occurred in 2020 and such burdens were not borne equally amongst consumers. Yet, the factors that drive such variation remain unclear. We examined the interactions between water quality and inherited equity gaps in one of the most diverse urban areas in the United States. We used publicly available drinking water datasets to determine which contaminant was most prevalent between 2010–2020 and who was significantly more likely to be affected by this contamination. We found that a lack of legal rights to control the water quality in one’s home (i.e., renting) was the number one predictor of heavy metal violations in a municipality. Individuals who spoke a language other than English were significantly more likely to rent homes with unsafe drinking water. To ensure equity in public health outcomes, current mandates must expand to include the design of actionable plans which include linguistically and culturally diverse residents, landlords, and tenants, as stakeholders in public water and housing decision making and remediation processes.
DOI
10.3390/w15193446
Journal ISSN / Book ISBN
85174060489 (Scopus)
MSU Digital Commons Citation
Cade, Rae; Yu, Danlin; Whyte, Kyle; Lal, Pankaj; and Borgerson, Cortni, "Poor Water Quality Persists in Diverse Urban Communities" (2023). Department of Earth and Environmental Studies Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works. 695.
https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/earth-environ-studies-facpubs/695
Published Citation
Cade, R., Yu, D., Whyte, K., Lal, P., & Borgerson, C. (2023). Poor Water Quality Persists in Diverse Urban Communities. Water, 15(19), 3446. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15193446
Comments
This article is Open Access and is distributed under a Creative Commons 4.0 License.