Mississippi’s capital city has long had a water problem. But this summer, pumps at the main water treatment facility were damaged, and then last week, flooding of the Pearl River after heavy rains affected treatment processes, Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba said. Now there’s not enough water pressure to serve some 180,000 people in the city.
“It’s been a difficult situation for myself but also for the residents all over the City of Jackson,” Mississippi State Rep. Ronnie Crudup Jr. told CNN’s Alisyn Camerota. “There are over 180,000 residents who are suffering right now because of this water outage.”
It’s “more than an inconvenience,” the mayor told CNN’s Pamela Brown. “It’s a disruption to life. How you schedule your day around having to go and pick up water,” he said.
Here’s a look at some of the extraordinary effects of living without running, potable water.
No water to flush toilets or brush teeth
People told CNN’s Ryan Young that they have been catching rainwater to flush their toilets and even to brush their teeth with it. And some said they tried to bathe their children in the brown water that came out of their faucets.
Crudup, however, said that although there was no water Monday night, on Tuesday there was enough water to flush toilets, but the water is discolored and not safe to drink.
He and his family used bottled water this morning to brush their teeth.
No air conditioning in medical centers
Some of Jackson’s University of Mississippi Medical Center facilities are experiencing issues as a result of the water crisis.
The Jackson Medical Mall air conditioning is not functioning properly “because the water pressure feeding its chillers is too low,” UMMC said in a statement Tuesday. It was 91 degrees in the city Tuesday.
A water tanker is expected to arrive Tuesday afternoon to feed the system so that it is fully operational, the center said.
No water for firefighters
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves declared a state of emergency Monday, saying there’s not enough water to fight fires or flush toilets.
Water will be brought into the city in tankers and organized for fire safety and life safety as well as for sanitation, Reeves said.
“Replacing our largest city’s infrastructure of water with human distribution is a massively complicated logistical task,” Reeves said.
Waiting for hours for a case of water
It was 91 degrees in Jackson Tuesday when cars were lined up for more than a mile to get one case of 24 12-ounce bottles of water at one of the distribution sites. Some waited more than 2 and a half-hours, only to reach the front of the line and be told that the water was all gone.
86-year-old Jeraldine Watts was in a line that was two miles long, she told CNN.
Watts, who was born and raised in Jackson, is living at home with her daughter and granddaughter and said they have to use bottled or boiled water for everything — to brush teeth, cook and wash dishes.
“If I had a bigger family how long would one case last?” Watts asked.
“It’s not OK,” Jackson resident Lynn Jones told CNN. “You know, we need to do something about it because we do pay taxes and we expect that the system will work.”
No classes and businesses are closed
Jackson Public Schools and Jackson State University are holding virtual classes because they have no water.
Numerous businesses were closed Tuesday with many going virtual, but some, including restaurants, are bringing in their own water trucks so that they can feed some of Jackson’s residents, Cudrup said.
Jackson State football program in ‘crisis mode’
The head football coach at Jackson State University said its football program is in “crisis mode.”
“Water means we don’t have air conditioning. Can’t use toilets,” Coach Deion Sanders said on Instagram. “We don’t have water, therefore we don’t have ice, which pretty much places a burden on the program. So right now we’re operating in crisis mode.”
“I gotta get these kids off campus — the ones that live on campus, the ones that live in the city of Jackson — into a hotel and accommodate them so that they can shower properly and take care of their needs,” Sanders said.
The coach is trying to find a place for the team to continue practicing, he said.
“Find somewhere that can accommodate every darn thing we need and desire to be, who we desire to be and that’s dominant,” Sanders said.
Fundraising for water
Rosa Barron, the pastor of the AME Church in Jackson, is raising money to buy water with hopes of turning her church into a pickup location.
“I had a churchgoer tell me that she had to leave her apartment because her water was shut off,” Barron said. “Another told me she spent hours filling up her bathtub so she can have enough water to flush the toilet.”
Barron started preparing for a possible water crisis last week when the city warned residents that the river might crest, she said.
“The city of Jackson has already been without enough water pressure for almost 31 days. I just had a feeling there was going to come a breaking point,” she said.
Last year, several Mississippi AME churches came together to raise money to buy water for their Jackson church after the city’s pipes burst because of the cold weather, according to Barron.
“People in apartments were without water. They couldn’t cook. They couldn’t bathe. They were, like they are now, without water.”
Barron plans to raise money to buy water to make available for people to pick up at her church. She also plans to deliver water to locals who can’t leave their homes, like the church did last year, she said.
CNN’s Amy Simonson, Ryan Young, Caroll Alvarado and Sara Smart contributed to this report.