Say I asked you to do a quick word association with the noun 鈥渨ater.鈥 Would your first response be trust?
Maybe not. But that鈥檚 what鈥檚 fortified each day that you turn on the tap and get clean water. And that鈥檚 what erodes 鈥 along with a sense of governmental accountability and justice 鈥 if that turn of the faucet delivers something you wouldn鈥檛 bathe in, let alone drink.
What is the ripple effect of that? What does it mean for the social contract that undergirds functioning societies?
We鈥檙e asking those questions as we report a series of stories on the sharp disparities in access to clean water across North America. But we鈥檙e watching something else as well: how a rise in citizen engagement may help close those gaps.
Water and social well-being are intimately connected. Just think about the sense of betrayal in Flint, Michigan, over the switch to a contaminated water supply in 2014. Or listen to salon owner Felicia Brisco, who spoke with Xander Peters recently in Jackson, Mississippi, about the toll of turning away customers for lack of water. Or read Sara Miller Llana鈥檚 story today from Six Nations of the Grand River, Ontario. As she reports, Indigenous communities are working to secure a voice in a new Canada Water Agency. What they bring, as scientist Ali Nazemi told Sara, is a 鈥渨in-win鈥 outlook, one that works with nature, and prioritizes fairness and agency.
Sara says that what struck her as she reported her story was how much work there is to do. But something else struck her as well: the opportunities, the possible paths forward. Those have long sat at the heart of our reporting. Xander puts it this way: 鈥淚 ask everyone, 鈥榳hat does this mean for you?鈥 Yes, it鈥檚 a story about policy. But ultimately, it鈥檚 about our shared humanity.鈥