A sewage crisis is bubbling up in communities of color across the country

Linda McNeil moved into her three-bedroom home in Mount Vernon, New York, 21 years ago. Six weeks after she closed on the property, heavy rain caused her water pipes to back up and sewage to flood her basement. It was the first in a string of ongoing backups over the last two decades, damaging her property and threatening the physical and mental health of her and her family. The latest backup of sewer water into her home was just this past weekend, kicked off by a summer rainstorm. “We’d have a mix of rainwater and raw sewage in the basement,” said McNeil’s daughter, Eileen Lambert. “Probably about three feet.” The first time the McNeil’s house flooded, all of their basement living room furniture was destroyed, as well as a freezer and their built-in bar. Over the years as the flooding continued, McNeil installed a pump system that cost $15,000 and the family stopped using the basement for fear of it flooding. Around four years ago, McNeil and Lambert were displaced from their home due to severe sewage backups that the city wasn’t able to fix immediately. “We used to have these big huge tankers that would just sit out in the woods across from our house,  that pumped around the clock,” Lambert told Grist. “Even then, it still wasn’t relieving the sewage pressure up against our home.”  From Thanksgiving weekend until after Valentine’s Day they stayed in a motel. “We finally got it clear, we were able to come back home, and we were good for about three years,” she said. Then it happened again. The back ups were so bad that McNeil was displaced from her home again. In total, Lambert estimates her mother has spent $50,000 dealing with the effects of the ongoing sewage backups. The first year her mom’s insurance company paid for some of the damages, but after that the loss was on them.  For almost two decades, residents in the majority Black city of Mount Vernon have lived with raw sewage backing up into their homes, flooding their streets, and polluting local waterways. In just the past three years, the city has experienced 900 sewer backups. Light rain is enough to overwhelm the city’s sewer pipes, leaving residents to vacuum up the waste that enters their homes themselves with a wet vac, with little redress from city officials.  “I’ve been to New York many times and was shocked to see that 20 minutes away from NYC, Third World conditions are impacting this city,” Catherine Flowers, vice chair of the White House Environmental Justice Advisory Council, said in a press conference last week, calling on the Biden administration to provide relief. 

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