Impact of federal relief funding unclear
As of Aug. 4, the
Navajo Health Department
had reported 9,156 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in a population of about 175,000 – more infections per 100,000 residents than any state in the country, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
The reservation also had a death toll
higher than that of 16 U.S. states, with 463 residents lost to the disease by that date.
Navajo officials have proposed spending about $300 million of the $714 million they’ve received in federal CARES Act funding on water infrastructure to help slow the spread of COVID-19, according to
a release
from Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez’s office.
But
restrictions
require officials to spend CARES Act funds by the end of the calendar year, and Navajo officials say it likely would take at least two years to get a substantial water infrastructure project off the ground.
Even if the federal government grants the spending extension Navajo leaders have requested, the extra time would not address the immediate needs of families without running water.
That’s where Tso and other Navajo volunteers come in. WATERED’s team has delivered hand-washing stations to more than 110 households on the 27,000-square-mile reservation as a stopgap measure, Tso said. The stations include reusable 5-gallon jugs and 5-gallon buckets for catching used water, and WATERED provides liquid hand soap, toilet paper, paper towels and disinfectant. The group relies on donations to cover supply and travel costs, Tso said, and some local companies have made in-kind contributions to increase WATERED’s efficiency and reach. The Glendale moving company State 48, for instance, provided a delivery truck to transport of the stations. These families “don’t have the ability to get a main source of stopping the spread of COVID as easily as most other communities,” State 48 owner Amanda Lindsey said.The total number of #COVID19 positive cases for the Navajo Nation is 9,308 as of August 9, 2020. Nearly 6,900 have recovered from the #Coronavirus on the largest reservation in the United States. #Arizona #NewMexico #Utah @NNPrezNez @NNVP_Lizer https://t.co/oYIn1wm6J9
— indianz.com (@indianz) August 10, 2020
Pandemic prompts ‘important’ access conversation
Annie Lascoe of DigDeep, a nonprofit that works to address water needs on the reservation and elsewhere, described water access as a “deeply entrenched racial justice issue.”
White households are 19 times as likely as Native households to have running water, according to a
2019 report
from DigDeep and the Water Alliance that argued rural and tribal community members “understand the historical barriers to access better than outsiders.”
“When we’re looking at Indigenous peoples’ rights, Indigenous communities around the world are the ones that are preserving all of our natural resources,” Lascoe said, citing the Navajo philosophy of “tó éí ííná” – “water is life.”
Yet Native populations are “the No. 1 communities that are also deeply impacted by entrenched systems that have robbed them of access to those resources,” she said.
Indeed, the U.S. government has repeatedly left tribal officials out of key water-policy negotiations, despite the 1908 Winters Doctrine promising federally reserved water rights to Indigenous communities.
These are hands-free hand wash stations that have the potential to help stop the spread of 80% of infectious diseases....
Posted by The Watered on Sunday, August 2, 2020
This story is made possible through a partnership between the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and the Center for the Study of Religion and Conflict at Arizona State University, with the support of the Henry Luce Foundation. It originally appeared on Cronkite News and is published via a Creative Commons license.
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