Current:Home > ContactCharles H. Sloan-West Baltimore Residents, Students Have Mixed Feelings About Water Quality After E. Coli Contamination -Wealth Nexus Pro
Charles H. Sloan-West Baltimore Residents, Students Have Mixed Feelings About Water Quality After E. Coli Contamination
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-08 08:05:18
BALTIMORE—Lily Goldsmith was in her kitchen making soup when she picked up her phone and Charles H. Sloanlearned from Twitter that the tap water in her West Baltimore neighborhood was contaminated with E. coli, and residents were being advised not to drink it.
A West Baltimore native who always took pride in the quality of the city’s water, Goldsmith was dismayed to have to boil water and rely on cases of bottled water just to get by.
“Water is such an essential thing to just your everyday life, and you come to sort of take it for granted … . It was really weird for that thing you normally take for granted to be sort of suddenly unsafe or maybe or maybe not unsafe—the uncertainty was very disturbing … especially since I got sick immediately after the boiled water advisory was lifted,” Goldsmith said.
Months after the boil water advisory was lifted, the experience has left residents with mixed feelings about whether to trust that the water in their homes is now clean. Some people, like Goldsmith, have gone back to drinking tap water. Others, like Jerell Paul, a junior chemistry major at Coppin State University, a historically Black college that sits within the neighborhood impacted by the boil water advisory, remain uncomfortable.
“You would never catch me drinking out the tap. I try to keep my mouth closed when I’m in the shower … I don’t really trust it,” said Paul.
On Sept. 5, the city of Baltimore issued a boil water advisory after detecting Escherichia coli—more commonly known as E. coli—contamination in the water. On Sept. 9, the city’s Department of Public Works released a statement officially lifting the boil water advisory after several negative water tests hinted at safe consumption.
An informational hearing with the City Administrator, the director of the Department of Public Works, the director of the Office of Emergency Management, the Baltimore city health commissioner, the Mayor’s senior director of communications and representatives from the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement appearing before the city council to discuss the water contamination issue occurred on Sept. 29. Here, city officials attributed the water contamination to aging infrastructure.
E. coli seeps into tap water through sewage overflow, agricultural storm runoff and broken water pipes, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Health impacts of E. coli include diarrhea and, in extreme cases, kidney failure.
Paul expressed that he and his two roommates at Coppin fell ill following the boil water advisory. Goldsmith said that her fiance had a stomach illness at the start of the advisory, and that she fell ill with cold-like symptoms that were not Covid-related about two days after the advisory was lifted. Neither they nor Paul and his roommates have been able to trace their ailments directly to the contaminated water.
“On a psychological level, it felt kind of gross not being able to just drink water freely. Even if you have bottles of water available, it just feels really peculiar—it feels like you’re sort of ignoring some of those basic health needs, or sort of putting them on the backburner,” Goldsmith said. “Also, even though bathing was sort of safe … it was sort of an underlying anxiety thing, sort of similar to how it was throughout the whole coronavirus pandemic. There’s that nagging anxiety in the back of your head about all the ‘what ifs.’”
After the notice of water contamination, residents in the West Baltimore community banded together to support one another. Nonprofit organizations, like the St. Francis Neighborhood Center where Goldsmith works, distributed bottled water to those in need. Goldsmith said they distributed over 200 cases of bottled water and a number of water jugs. The excess bottled water was used during their community harvest festival in October.
At Coppin State, student leaders such as Ira Anderson Jr., an elementary education major and junior class vice president, worked to ensure students had access to bottled water during the advisory. Ironically, just a week prior, students held a bottled water drive to support students at Jackson State University after they and other residents of Jackson, Mississippi, were without water due to late summer flooding.
“We actually did a water drive for them and turned around the very next week and needed to do one for ourselves,” Anderson said.
Since that time, Coppin’s student organizations have been stashing cases of bottled water in the student activities center in case more contamination arises. An East Baltimore native living in West Baltimore, Anderson is just hoping to be as proactive as possible for the student body—something he criticizes local officials for not doing.
“I just feel like that stuff didn’t happen overnight,” Anderson said, arguing that rusted or corroded pipes should have been a “red flag” that triggered repairs. “Being proactive instead of reactive, like, let’s go ahead and handle it now,” he said.
After the Mayor’s Office was criticized for the way it handled communications during the E. coli outbreak, Monica Lewis, the mayor’s senior director of communications, said that in the future all agencies involved will communicate with her office to determine the best response.
Following the outbreak, the city applied a 25 percent discount on residents’ water bills in October after the contamination issues of September. Anderson, whose water bill typically costs between $230 to $240, saw his bill reduced and was thankful to have some type of relief.
Although Paul has stopped using the water at Coppin State, his roommate, Jaime Tudor, a Prince George’s County native, is drinking the water again but staying prepared for the likelihood of another outbreak.
“I’m giving the water a chance,” he said. “I’m giving it the benefit of the doubt. I haven’t gotten sick or anything like that.” But should he get another boil water notification, Paul added, “I’m back to what I was doing” before.
Though it took her a while, Goldsmith has returned to her traditional usage of the water.
“I’ve definitely shifted back to just drinking water from the tap as I did before,” she said. “It definitely took me a little bit to get comfortable doing that again … but now I’m pretty much back to how I was before.”
veryGood! (1777)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Want to read Stephen King books? Here’s where to start.
- ‘A master of storytelling’ — Reaction to the death of pioneering TV figure Norman Lear
- A narrowing Republican presidential field will debate with just six weeks before the Iowa caucuses
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- Legal battle brewing between coffee brands by Taylor Sheridan, Cole Hauser of 'Yellowstone'
- 'DWTS' crowns Xochitl Gomez, Val Chmerkovskiy winners of the Len Goodman Mirrorball trophy
- 2024 Salzburg festival lineup includes new productions of ‘Der Idiot’ and ‘The Gambler’
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Families of 3 killed in Jacksonville Dollar General shooting sue store, gunman's family
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Erin Andrews Reveals What NFL WAGs Think About Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift's Romance
- Ariana Madix Is Headed to Broadway: All the Details on Her Iconic Next Role
- Daddy Yankee says he's devoting himself to Christianity after retirement: 'Jesus lives in me'
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Hilarie Burton Says Sophia Bush Was The Pretty One in One Tree Hill Marching Order
- Biden says he's not sure he'd be running for reelection if Trump weren't
- EV tax credit for certain Tesla models may be smaller in 2024. Which models are at risk?
Recommendation
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
2023 (Taylor’s Version): The year in pop culture
2024 Salzburg festival lineup includes new productions of ‘Der Idiot’ and ‘The Gambler’
The UK apologizes to families of 97 Liverpool soccer fans killed after a stadium crush 34 years ago
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
Australian government hopes to rush laws that could detain dangerous migrants
Norman Lear, producer of TV’s ‘All in the Family’ and influential liberal advocate, has died at 101
Venezuela’s AG orders arrest of opposition members, accuses them of plotting against referendum