Cronkite News
PHOENIX – Two-time Super Bowl champion Chris Long and his foundation are donating $100,000 to the Navajo Nation to improve access to water on the reservation.
The money, which will go to DigDeep’s Navajo Water Project, will be used to install 1,200-gallon solar-powered water systems under hundreds of homes to ensure that families have reliable, clean water.
“We’ve been doing work for years now on Navajo Nation, which is the largest reservation in the U.S.,” DigDeep founder George McGraw said. “If it was a state, it would be our 10th biggest.”
DigDeep, a nonprofit founded in 2012, aims to bring running water to communities across America. The Navajo Water Project, an offshoot of DigDeep that started in 2014, has served hundreds of Navajo families. The Chris Long Foundation’s Waterboys initiative will fund 200 temporary underground water tank systems that can hold 275 gallons each. Permanent systems will be installed once the tribe relaxes its COVID-19 protocols. Waterboys was created in 2015 and focused on bringing water to communities in East Africa, but Long also wanted to place attention on communities in the U.S. “Clean water is a global issue, even here at home,” said Long, a defensive end who played for the St. Louis Rams, New England Patriots and Philadelphia Eagles before retiring in 2018. “It’s right under our noses.”You may never meet this gorgeous Navajo family, but your support of our work helps protect them from COVID-19. Don't forget that while you might not see the results of your generosity with your own two eyes, the impact you have is greater and happier than you can imagine 💙🥰 pic.twitter.com/ucJSiLKYbv
— DIGDEEP (@DigDeepH2O) July 13, 2020
Note: This story originally appeared on Cronkite News. It is published via a Creative Commons license. Cronkite News is produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.
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