WATER/COLOR A STUDY OF RACE & THE WATER AFFORDABILITY CRISIS IN AMERICA’S CITIES A REPORT BY T H E T H U R G O O D M A R S H A L L I N ST I T U T E AT T H E N A A C P L E G A L D E F E N S E A N D E D U C AT I O N A L F U N D , I N C1 . WAT E R / C O L O R A Study of Race and the Water Affordability Crisis in America’s Cities NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) Sherrilyn Ifill, President & Director-Counsel Thurgood Marshall Institute at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. Author Coty Montag For more information about LDF or to make a tax-deductible contribution to support LDF’s work, please visit: www.naacpldf.org or call 212.965.2200. To obtain a copy of the report, please contact: LDF Communications Department, 40 Rector Street, 5th Floor New York, NY 10006. To download a copy, please visit: www.naacpldf.org. ©2019 The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. 2 table of contents 1 Introduction and Key Findings 6 Part I: Water Under Construction The Building Years: Late 18th Century to Early 20th Century Race and Water During the Building Years The Boom and Bust Years: Early 20th Century to the Present Day Race and Water During the Boom and Bust Years 20 Part II: Water in Crisis The High Price of Water City Studies: Baltimore, Maryland and Cleveland, Ohio 61 Part III: Water and Change Addressing Water Affordability Through Litigation Policy and Research Recommendations 73 Conclusion 3 introduction It is difficult to overstate the importance of water. Water is life: it is essential for our health, for our food to grow, for our communities to function and thrive. Yet, critical issues like affordability and quality are often overlooked and understudied because of the abundance of water in our lives. For most of us throughout the United States, we turn on the tap and water flows freely and cleanly. But our lack of appreciation for water is nothing new: in 1776 (a time when the delivery and supply of water was no easy feat), the “diamond-water paradox” was coined. As the paradox goes: Nothing is more useful than water: but it will purchase scarce anything; scarce anything can be had in exchange for it. A diamond, on the contrary, has scarce any use-value; but a very great quantity of other goods may frequently be had in exchange for it.1 In other words, although we need water to survive, we take it for granted. This view informed how water law and policy developed in the courts: because water resources have historically been plentiful in this country (particularly on the East Coast), access to water has not traditionally been viewed as a fundamental right in the U.S. and has even been called a “deeply foreign” concept in American jurisprudence.2 Now more than ever, this must change. The price of water has greatly increased in recent decades, and scores of communities across the nation that cannot afford to pay higher rates have been plagued by service disconnections and lien sales, leading to home foreclosures and evictions. These practices have been shown to disproportionately impact people of color. But this form of discrimination is rooted in our nation’s history. For as long as our cities have been rigidly segregated by race, local officials have found ways to deprive communities of color of access to essential water services. Municipal discrimination in the provision of water services runs deep. 1 In recent years, significant strides have been made in recognizing the human right to water, as well as increased attention to the growing problem of water unaffordability. However, few studies have made an explicit link between race and the affordability of water or have interrogated the connection between the failure to pay a water bill and the loss of Black homeownership. This report does both. It begins with a historical overview of the construction of U.S. urban water systems and the development of water policy from the late 18th century to the present, including a discussion of Black access (or lack thereof) to water systems and services over time. We explain the current water affordability crisis impacting Black communities and identify failing infrastructure as the biggest contributing factor to rising costs. To demonstrate the disproportionate impact of rising water bills on Black communities, this report includes a review of the affordability crises in Baltimore and Cleveland. We demonstrate how water costs are allocated in each area, document the rise in water costs to residents in recent years, and analyze each jurisdiction’s use of water liens for unpaid bills. Finally, we provide a framework for potential litigation and policy solutions to challenge water lien sales and service disconnections that have a disproportionate impact on Black communities. With this report, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) and its Thurgood Marshall Institute hope to equip water equality advocates with sufficient context and background about our waterworks systems and ways to challenge—and change—local government actions that impede Black access to water and sewer systems. We also wish to convey and instill an appreciation and awareness for the role water regulation has played in shaping our communities, reinforcing municipal power, and perpetuating racial inequities. 2 key findings Black Access to Water Systems First, this report examines early waterworks systems in the U.S., which revolutionized public health and defined the social contract between the American metropolis and its citizens. We conclude that the historical view of water as a public good ensured that, at least initially, cities priced their water low and did not preclude service to those who could not afford it. Despite this, many of our early waterworks were privately-owned, but not without controversy, including higher rates for customers and poor service. Our research confirmed a clear connection between racial residential segregation and Black access to water systems. Housing patterns helped inform Black access to water when our nation’s public infrastructure was first constructed: as racial segregation at that time typically was limited to a street, or few city blocks, rather than stretching the width and breadth of an entire city ward or census tract, it was more difficult for municipalities to deny water services specifically to Black families, given the networked nature of these systems. The ensuing expansion of access to water led to an overall decline in Black mortality in the early 20th century. As U.S. cities became more racially segregated, however, localities prioritized services to white areas. In the mid-20th century, residential segregation greatly increased in the United States, as homeownership became a reality for many white middle-class families and discrimination in both the public and private sectors restricted housing options in Black communities. Increased patterns of residential segregation enabled municipalities to more easily deprive majority-Black neighborhoods of access to essential services, including water and sewer. In the late 1960s, LDF pioneered an innovative campaign to equalize municipal services in Black communities throughout America, although the full reach of this effort was later limited by the Supreme Court. 3 Water Rates & Black Homeownership In recent decades, the price of water has skyrocketed. Our research confirmed that failing infrastructure is the biggest contributing factor to rising water costs. Water rates vary widely among cities and regions, due to factors such as population loss and local political dynamics. Regardless, water is becoming increasingly unaffordable in communities nationwide. Of particular concern, the most common methodology for determining whether a water bill is affordable (examining whether it exceeds two/2.5 percent of median household income) is unsupported by social science research and may not capture the full extent to which water is unaffordable, highlighting the need for a revised, validated standard. Unsurprisingly, rising water rates are most likely to impact communities of color. The failure to pay a water bill can result in significant consequences, including service disconnections and property liens. We determined that there is a process in every state for local governments to place liens on homes for unpaid water or sewer bills, including for unpaid debt of just a few hundred dollars. In many states, a water or sewer lien can directly lead to foreclosure and eviction. To demonstrate the disproportionate impact of rising water bills on Black communities, this report examines the current water crises in Baltimore and Cleveland. We determined that Baltimore’s water affordability crisis has and will continue to have a disproportionate and detrimental impact on the city’s Black neighborhoods. Until recently, Baltimore regularly placed liens on homes for as little as $350 in unpaid water bills, which contributed to an overall decrease in homeownership in the predominantly Black city. Legislative efforts at the state and city level, spearheaded by water equality advocates, bring the promise of much-needed reforms to address the water crisis in Baltimore. Property liens for unpaid water bills as low as $300 are a massive problem in Cleveland. In Cuyahoga County, where Cleveland is located, more than 11,000 water liens were placed on properties between 2014 and 2018. LDF found that most water liens placed on homes in Cuyahoga County are located in majority-Black neighborhoods, which may lead to a devastating loss of homeownership among the city’s Black population. Cleveland Water also disconnects water service to thousands of delinquent customers every year. City officials have explained to local advocates that, to maximize efficiency, they prioritize utility shutoffs by targeting households with overdue balances in close proximity to one another. This potentially penalizes predominantly Black and low-income neighborhoods, effectively making no distinction between an account in arrears for a few thousand dollars, or just a few hundred. Compounding these problems, for at least a decade, Cleveland’s water department has been troubled by issues like billing glitches, customer service issues, and a faulty process for customers to contest their bills. LDF found that Cleveland’s Water Review Board seldom grants complainants a hearing and even fewer ever see any adjustment in their bill. For example, while customers requested 207 hearings in 2018, only 33 were held. Of the hearings that were held, 28 percent of customers received no relief, and 26 percent received only a payment plan—with no bill adjustment—to pay off their debt. 4 Framework for Change To address the impact of the water affordability crisis on Black communities across the country, this report provides a framework for potential litigation. We conclude that litigation may be viable and appropriate to address municipal water practices, including water liens and service disconnections, which disproportionately impact Black communities. We also offer potential policy solutions and research initiatives. Specifically, communities should adopt legislation to ban water lien sales, prevent the privatization of waterworks, and recognize the human right to affordable, clean water. Advocates should also support research initiatives, including on the benchmark for water affordability and the lasting effect of lien sales on communities of color. 5 part I: water under construction Water is essential to life—the life of a city as well as the life of a human being. Without water, a man dies. Without water, a community faces the same fate. -Leonard A. Scheele, Surgeon General, United States Health Service (1952)3 The concept of access to clean water and sanitation, even for the poorest among us, has always been part of the public commons, viewed as something owned by humanity as a rule. -Maureen Taylor, State Chairperson, Michigan Welfare Rights Organization (2019)4 6 The Building Years (Late 18th Century to Early 20th Century) The origin and development of our urban water systems began at the close of the 18th century, when the United States was transforming into a nation of cities with skyrocketing populations.5 These burgeoning cities were filthy and epidemic disease was rampant.6 As the urban population rapidly increased throughout the 19th century and infectious disease ravaged the American metropolis, local leaders learned that they must build large-scale systems to provide water to their citizens.7 They later realized that the water must be treated and that sewage systems are key to municipal health.8 Clean water technologies led to a rapid decline in mortality rates due to infectious disease and were named “the most important public health intervention of the 20th century.”9 In addition to the public health benefits, waterworks systems helped cities prosper. By the late 19th century, waterworks were viewed as essential for a city to be considered “respectable.”10 They also helped solidify the meaning of urban “citizenship” as city dwellers moved from utilizing individual water sources to banding together to provide funds for a system that would collectively serve them all.11 “By linking oneself to a central water supply,” wrote Dr. Carl Smith in City Water, City Life: Water and the Infrastructure of Ideas in Urbanizing Philadelphia, Boston, and Chicago, “one irrefutably became an urban person, one of thousands of individuals whose everyday existence required this shared resource.”12 As cities built their waterworks systems, they needed to determine whether they would be public or private. As Dr. Smith described it, public ownership was not assumed: at the time, cities did not take on responsibility for major public works.13 In fact, at the turn of the 19th century, the prevailing sentiment was that a local government was not obligated to respond to the needs of its community. Instead, “the city was to be an environment for private moneymaking, and its government was to encourage private business.”14 The development of waterworks helped reshape this view, and the decision to construct a water supply system was often the first significant undertaking of a city government.15 Over time, cities started to view municipal ownership of waterworks as the best way to serve the collective public good.16 In 1849, the Committee on Public Health of the American Medical Association made a finding that: The introduction of an abundant supply of water is so intimately connected with the health of a city, that the municipal authorities should rank this among the most important of their public duties … The public welfare is too deeply interested in their faithful performance, safely to permit them to pass into the hands of incorporated companies, who, however high-minded they may be, look to them as sources of revenue, and not as objects of public good.17 This view of water as a public good, serving the public good, also informed how water was initially priced.18 While cities needed to generate revenue to cover expenses, the general view was that water should be priced as low as possible and that those who could not afford it would not be denied service.19 Despite this push for municipal ownership, there was initially a split between private and public ownership of waterworks.20 In 1860, over half of U.S. waterworks were private, although many of the largest cities had public systems.21 New York’s system was initially private, while Philadelphia’s was public.22 The ownership decision was often directly correlated with the economic health of the city—the more financially stable a city, the more likely it would retain public ownership of its waterworks.23 7 By the 1870s, there was a definite trend toward public ownership of waterworks.24 At that time, cities were able to take on more funded debt through municipal bonds and control of the water system enhanced the authority of local government.25 Additionally, public opinion was turning against the privately-owned companies, which charged customers high rates but often delivered poor service, failing to provide water to some neighborhoods, sufficient water for fire hydrants or other civic purposes, or in some cases, potable water.26 Private firms also began to recognize that their investment in waterworks may not generate the expected profit, as the fees they were able to charge under franchise contracts (even if higher than the fees charged by publicly-owned systems) were insufficient to cover costs.27 Private companies that were dissatisfied with their contracts would often refuse to make system repairs and upgrades, or would intentionally “disturb public comfort” by tearing up streets for extensions and improvements.28 Given these issues, more than 65 percent of the total urban population in the United States was served by a public water system by 1890.29 At the dawn of the 20th century, the vast majority of the American population received water from public systems.30 (But this trend toward public ownership was slow to reach other utilities. Electric, gas, telephone, and even public transit systems were largely private enterprises until the mid-20th century.31) By the early 20th century, American cities had completely transformed the way they delivered water and removed waste, moving from individual sources of collection to large-scale municipal systems that treated water and sewage. The benefits of these water and wastewater systems cannot be overstated: they revolutionized public health, helped solidify the meaning of urban citizenship, and defined the role of a municipality in providing for the wellbeing of its residents. These (significant) benefits aside, few of the treatises that detail the history of our nation’s waterworks make any mention of race. Below, in Race and Water in the Building Years, this report examines Black access to waterworks when these systems were first constructed. Image: Engraving of the Battle Monument and surrounding streets, Baltimore, Maryland, circa 1850. Engraved by A L Dick from the original by W H Bartlett. (Photo by Archive Photos/Getty Images) 8 Race and Water in the Building Years In 1847, at a ceremony celebrating the construction of Boston’s waterworks, Mayor Josiah Quincy Jr. gave an exuberant speech about the significance of water, stating that there was “nothing sectarian, nothing sectional, nothing exclusive about it.”32 Water was “an equal blessing to the high and low, the rich and the poor, the just and the unjust.”33 In Mayor Quincy’s view, the “gift of water” serves us all.34 But this raises a key question: as our nation’s waterworks systems were constructed, were their benefits extended to Black communities on an equal basis with other communities? It’s certainly true that Black Americans were exposed to the pervasive filth and disease of the Building Years. In Black Gotham: A Family History of African Americans in Nineteenth-Century New York City, Dr. Carla L. Peterson wrote about Collect Street in New York City, built on Collect Pond, where Black New Yorkers were able to buy or lease land in the early 19th century.35 Dr. Peterson noted that the street filth that was a hallmark of this era was “particularly appalling” on Collect Street, leading one citizen to pen an open letter to the New York Journal, complaining: “It’s like a fair every day with whites, and blacks, washing their cloths blankets and things too nauseous to mention; all their sudds and filth are emptied into this pond … and no doubt, many buckets [of bodily waste] from that quarter of town.”36 Many historians have noted that Black people (as well as newly-arriving immigrants and the poor) were especially vulnerable to and often blamed for the spread of epidemic disease.37 In particular, cholera was blamed on the Black population in both the North and South.38 As Dr. Peterson observed, while the white population accused Black people of spreading disease by engaging in risky behaviors (like drinking and promiscuity), it failed to recognize that Black workers were more likely to be employed in jobs that increased their exposure to bacteria, like street sanitation.39 Additionally, many freed Black people, who moved north into cities or into refugee camps following the Civil War, were subjected to crowded and unsanitary housing conditions, leading to the spread of diseases like smallpox.40 In 1887, Black mortality was estimated to be twice that of whites.41 At least one major sociological study conducted at the close of the 19th century found that Black access to water and sewer services was limited during this time. In his seminal classic, The Philadelphia Negro, Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois provided significant insight into the condition of Black neighborhoods in Philadelphia in the late 1800s.42 From 1896 to 1897, Dr. Du Bois surveyed approximately 9,000 Black Philadelphians about their living conditions.43 His questionnaire asked each family about the existence of a bathroom, water closet, or privy in the home, as well as outside sanitary conditions and cleanliness.44 In his findings, Dr. Du Bois made a clear connection between mortality and sanitation, noting that the highest death rate in the city was located in the ward with the poorest sanitation (conversely, the lowest death rate was in the part of the city with the cleanest streets).45 Dr. Du Bois was not impressed with Philadelphia’s waterworks, noting that “[f]or so large and progressive a city its general system of drainage is very bad; its water is wretched.”46 Dr. Du Bois found that few Black families had access to indoor plumbing.47 He determined that just under 14 percent of the families he surveyed had access to bathrooms or water closets, and many did not have access to private outhouses.48 Families in the “fairly comfortable working class” with access to bathrooms often shared them with others, and bathtubs either had no water connection or no hot water.49 The homes in the area Dr. Du Bois examined had originally been constructed with larger backyards for outhouses, but by the time of his survey, the yards were filled with tenement houses, decreasing the overall sanitation of the neighborhood.50 The residents of tenement housing were forced to obtain water from a hydrant in the alley.51 Dr. Du Bois also noted a general lack of public urinals and water closets throughout the city.52 However, and perhaps surprisingly, there is evidence that there were fewer racial inequities in water and sewer facilities in the late 19th and early 20th centuries than might be expected.53 Between 1900 and 1940, the life expectancy for urban-dwelling Black people in the U.S. rose by nearly 50 percent, from 30 to 44 years.54 Black American life expectancy has always been less than that for whites, but the deficit closed from a 17-year gap in 1900 to a seven-year gap in 1960.55 In Water, Race, and Disease, Dr. Werner Troesken connected these increases in Black American life expectancy to the construction of water and sewer systems throughout 9 the country.56 While waterworks systems decreased mortality for all races, Dr. Troesken found that Black Americans—particularly those who resided in cities—benefitted more than whites from waterworks systems, as they were less likely to be able to afford private sources of clean water before these systems were built and thus were more susceptible to disease.57 Critically, housing patterns in the late 19th century expanded Black access to water systems. At that time, to the extent that cities were racially segregated, it was typically limited to an alley, street, or block level, rather than across an entire city ward or census tract.58 This made it more difficult for municipalities to deny water services specifically to Black families, given the networked nature of these systems.59 In fact, in 1890, the average Black person lived in a city ward that was only 20 percent Black.60 (New York and Chicago may have had the most stark racial segregation in the late 19th century, where Black people were restricted to certain blocks, but cities like Detroit and Cincinnati were far more racially integrated at the end of the century than they are now.61) By 1910, when segregation ordinances increased in popularity,62 most water and sewer systems were already in place in major cities.63 To support his theory, Dr. Troesken examined the construction of the sewer system in Memphis, which was designed by Colonel George E. Waring following the 1878 yellow fever epidemic in the city.64 He determined that, by 1884, nearly all Memphis residents, regardless of race, had access to the sewer system, save for one neighborhood with a slight majority-Black population.65 Even assuming that service to this neighborhood was delayed because of racial discrimination, Dr. Troesken found that construction of the sewer system benefitted both Black and white people, as the total mortality rate for all races in Memphis fell 50 percent between 1884 and 1895.66 By 1890, Memphis had one of the most developed sewer systems in the United States and there were only small racial disparities in access to the public sewer mains.67 In fact, Dr. Troesken determined that Black people benefitted as much as whites, if not more, from the construction of the city’s sewer system.68 However, cities with higher rates of residential segregation prioritized water and sewer services to white neighborhoods. Dr. Troesken also examined the construction of a sewer system in Savannah, which was struck by yellow fever in 1820, 1854, and 1876.69 Savannah was slow to respond to the epidemics and did not begin construction of its system until 1898.70 By that time, the city was fairly segregated by race, enabling officials to prioritize construction in white areas.71 Indeed, Dr. Troesken concluded that Savannah did not extend service to Black neighborhoods on the same basis as white neighborhoods: in 1900, 88 percent of white households had access to the sewer system, compared to only 58 percent of Black households.72 However, by 1905, 100 percent of all households were connected.73 Dr. Troesken also examined access to water and sewer services in 15 cities in 1915 and determined that in segregated cities, Black residents received water and sewer services only after whites did; in integrated cities, they received these services concurrently.74 Importantly, Dr. Troesken acknowledged (in a subchapter of his book entitled “Why Bigots Wanted Sewers for Everybody”) that increased access to water and sewer services for Black neighborhoods was not motivated by whites’ desire for equality and justice, but self-interest in preventing the spread of disease.75 Most cities could not risk exempting Black areas from water or sewer services, as that would increase the risk of disease in other areas, including majority-white neighborhoods.76 White supremacy and paternalism also played a role in extending services to Black neighborhoods. For example, Dr. C.E. Terry, the municipal health officer for Jacksonville, Florida, advocated for adequate water and sewer services to Black neighborhoods only because he believed that Black people were inferior to whites and that poor hygiene and disease among the Black population stymied economic progress.77 In papers sent to the American Public Health Association, Dr. Terry wrote that “[t]he increase in the total death rate of our cities, through the excessive negro mortality, exerts a definite, harmful influence upon our growth … of [great] import is … the direct influence of the negro race as a menace to our own—a source and disseminator of infection.”78 Dr. William F. Brunner, the health officer for Savannah, made similar specious arguments to the Association, stating that “there is a contamination of the white race by the negro race and this contamination is both physical and moral.”79 10 11 Image: Man Drinking Water at “Colored” Water Cooler in Bus Terminal, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA, Russell Lee, Farm Security Administration, July 1939 (Photo by: Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty Images) Dr. Troesken’s findings are consistent with the accounts of other historians and sociologists: racial segregation in cities impeded Black access to water systems. Multiple studies have shown that, as water systems were constructed throughout the U.S., Black neighborhoods were delayed in receiving services.80 And as residential segregation increased throughout the 20th century, Black access to municipal services like water and sewer decreased. Next, this report delves into the development of water policy in the 20th century, when the federal government made serious investments in both housing and water systems before leaving municipalities to fend for themselves to make (or delay) infrastructure improvements. The Boom and Bust Years (Early 20th Century to the Present Day) Between the 1920s and 1940s, the urban population of the United States continued to dramatically increase, leading to sprawl and suburban expansion.81 The federal government played a significant role in the development of suburbs, guaranteeing affordable mortgages for white middle-class families through the Federal Housing Administration and Veterans Administration.82 In the 1940s, 22 million (mostly white) American families became homeowners, due in large part to the policies of the federal government that made homeownership for these families affordable and practicable.83 As part of this housing boom, American homes were significantly modernized. By 1940, approximately 94 percent of urban homes had clean running piped water and sewer pipes for waste disposal, and more than 80 percent had interior flush toilets.84 New technologies—such as automatic dishwashers, washing machines, and air conditioners—increased Americans’ water usage and strained existing infrastructure.85 By mid-century, many of the waterworks systems built in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were in decline, experiencing issues like low peak pressure, insufficient storage, and poor water quality.86 In 1958, an article in Fortune magazine on infrastructure declared that water supply and sewerage “remain a signal failure in public works.”87 At the same time, new waterworks continued to be built, particularly in the post-World War II boom years. While there were only 244 waterworks systems in the U.S. in 1870, there were more than 20,000 systems supplying 20 billion gallons of water daily to 94 million people a century later.88 By the mid-20th century, almost all systems—close to 85 percent—were publicly-owned.89 Water pollution became a major concern in the 20th century as health experts began to recognize and appreciate the impact of industrial pollutants on waterways.90 In 1948, Congress passed the Water Pollution Control Act to empower the federal government to help lessen interstate water pollution.91 However, the Act required consent from participating states and was difficult to enforce.92 In 1956, Congress reauthorized the Act, strengthening its enforcement provisions and providing loans and matching grants for sewage treatment plant construction.93 This increased funding alleviated some pollution, but many cities continued to discharge waste into water bodies. For example, sewage and factory wastes were released into Lake Erie with little or no treatment.94 Over the next few decades, environmental activists continued to bring attention to pollution concerns, particularly following the publication of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring in 1962 and the burning of the Cuyahoga River in 1969.95 In 1965, the federal government became more involved in water quality management after passage of the Water Quality Act, although significant pollution issues remained even after the statute was enacted.96 Eventually, the federal government assumed an even larger role in the regulation of the environment, including water supplies. President Nixon established the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1970, and the first Earth Day was celebrated that year.97 In 1972, Congress overrode a presidential veto to enact the Clean Water Act, which regulates water pollution and was considered a critical turning point in water quality legislation.98 In 1974, the Safe Drinking Water Act was passed to protect the nation’s drinking water supply from contaminants.99 12 The Clean Water Act required municipalities to expend significant funds to build and upgrade facilities to treat water. The federal government funded most of these improvements following passage of the statute. In the 1970s, federal funding for water systems was at an all-time high, peaking in 1977.100 When adjusted for inflation, the federal government provided about $80 billion to local utilities to construct and upgrade treatment facilities in the 15 years after the law was enacted.101 But once this building boom was over, the government stepped back. During the Reagan administration, the federal government weakened environmental protections and ended the Clean Water Act grant program.102 But it wasn’t just the EPA that pulled back from funding water projects: during this time, public funding for water resources decreased by 60 percent.103 The 1990s heralded somewhat of a trend back toward the privatization of waterworks systems.104 Between 1993 and 2003, the number of publicly-owned systems operating under private contracts increased from 400 to 1,100.105 During that same time period, the number of people served by these companies increased from 51 million to nearly 300 million.106 But municipalities experienced similar issues with the private sector as they did in the 19th century. For example, in 1998, Atlanta granted a 20-year contract to a private company to run its municipal water system.107 Once the company took over, the quality of Atlanta’s water suffered (turning to a rusty brown color), hundreds of waterworks employees were fired, and city funds were improperly used by the company for outside projects.108 The contract was “amicably dissolved” in 2003, and the city returned to public ownership.109 In recent years, struggling municipalities have once again looked to private contracts to provide financial resources for waterworks—with similar pitfalls and problems, as described further in Part II below. Federal funding for water projects, while greatly reduced from the 1970s peak, has not completely disappeared. Now, the EPA provides states with low-interest loans for water infrastructure projects from Drinking Water and Clean Water “revolving funds.”110 Pursuant to these programs, the agency awards states with annual grants, which they use to make low- or no-interest loans to local communities and utilities for various water and wastewater projects.111 States are required to match at least 20 percent of the federal funds.112 From 1997 through 2015, the EPA provided over $18 billion to states from the Drinking Water fund.113 Between 1988 and 2015, the EPA awarded nearly $40 billion through the Clean Water fund. During these periods, states have contributed more than $10 billion through both programs.114 Despite this investment, the revolving funds are not able to match the demand for infrastructure improvements nationwide, and federal funding for the programs has decreased over time.115 The delivery of water remains a local matter. Currently, there are approximately 156,000 public drinking water systems across the country, including about 54,000 community water systems, which serve most Americans (about 15 million households supply their own water).116 Perhaps surprisingly, water consumption in the United States has actually remained steady since 1985, despite a population increase of 70 million people.117 While Americans’ water usage roughly doubled between 1950 and 1980, the decrease in the decades since can be attributed to more efficient fixtures, conservation efforts, and the transition from a manufacturing to a service economy.118 As Charles Fishman noted in The Big Thirst: The Secret Life and Turbulent Future of Water, if we used as much water today as we did in 1980, every place in the United States would need 40 percent more water than is needed now.119 Next, in Race and Water in the Boom and Bust Years, this report tackles issues of race and water beginning in the mid-20th century, when stark residential segregation limited Black communities’ access to water and the concept of environmental justice came to the fore. 13 Race and Water in the Boom and Bust Years As noted previously, the housing boom in the early decades of the 20th century was primarily for the benefit of white middle-class families that fled urban centers to settle in outlying suburban areas. This “white flight” ushered in intense residential racial segregation throughout the nation. As detailed by Richard Rothstein in The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America, residential segregation was created, encouraged, and reinforced through the racially explicit policies of federal, state, and local governments.120 The Federal Housing Administration and Veterans Administration financed entire suburbs as white enclaves, refusing to insure loans to Black families and veterans.121 The Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, created by the federal government to rescue households that were near default on their mortgages, used color-coded maps to determine the risk of default and labeled Black neighborhoods as red (the highest level of risk) simply because of the race of their residents.122 This created the practice of redlining (which persists to this day), in which banks refuse to extend credit or otherwise have a lending presence in communities of color.123 Federal and local governments promoted the use of racially restrictive covenants in deeds to prevent the sale of homes to Black families.124 Segregation was also heightened through private action. For example, real estate agents engaged in blockbusting, in which they would persuade white families to sell their homes at a bargain (preying on the white fear of Black neighbors) and then resell the vacant homes to Black families at inflated prices.125 As a result of these practices, by 1970, the average Black person lived in a neighborhood that was 70 percent Black, typically in the center city (in the North) or in a clustered community, often on the outside border of a municipality (in the South).126 Consistent with Dr. Troesken’s findings, increased residential segregation heightened racial inequities in the provision of municipal services like water and sewer. In the Kerner Commission’s 1968 report, examining the causes of race riots throughout the U.S., municipal inadequacies were cited as a major grievance by Black communities.127 In 1967, LDF pioneered an effort to require cities to equalize these services by filing a lawsuit on behalf of a group of Black families living in Shaw, Mississippi.128 The lead plaintiff in Hawkins v. Town of Shaw, Andrew Hawkins, was a Black carpenter living with his wife and children in the “Promised Land,” one of Shaw’s oldest and largest Black neighborhoods.129 Shaw was a poor town: it did not have a public water system until the 1930s, did not begin paving roads until 1960, did not have sanitary sewers until 1963, and had no system for surface water drainage until 1970.130 By the late 1960s, Shaw was completely segregated with a white side, which had comfortable municipal amenities (despite the town’s general poverty), and a Black side, which lacked water mains, fire hydrants, and sanitary sewers, and where the streets were unpaved and unlit.131 While only 30 percent of Shaw’s population was white, 97 percent of the residents of the neighborhoods that lacked services were Black.132 Only 80 percent of homes on the Black side had access to sanitary sewers, while virtually all white homes had access.133 Unlike the Black neighborhoods, Shaw’s white neighborhoods had underground storm sewers.134 Smaller water mains had been installed in Black homes, resulting in much lower water pressure as compared to homes in the white neighborhoods.135 Like many of his neighbors, Mr. Hawkins’s home had no indoor plumbing.136 Image: March 1953, African American mother walking with children to distant school. (Photo by Carl Iwasaki/The LIFE Images Collection/ Getty Images) 14 According to Charles Haar and Daniel Fessler, two law professors who filed an amicus brief in Shaw (and later wrote a book about the case), the idea to raise a constitutional challenge to a municipality’s inequitable provision of public services arose out of LDF’s Jackson, Mississippi office.137 LDF lawyers believed that they could logically extend the successful battle to desegregate schools and public facilities to challenge discriminatory living conditions under the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.138 Success was far from assured—as Professors Haar and Fessler described it, issues of sovereign immunity and standing would have dissuaded “all but the most ill-informed (or innovative) lawyers from attempting a municipal services equalization suit in 1960 … the prospect of representing the destitute residents of the worst part of town would have tempted few lawyers even if ultimate legal victory had been far more likely.”139 (Ill-informed comment aside, this statement still accurately reflects LDF’s hard-working lawyers today.) LDF filed Mr. Hawkins’s class action complaint in the Northern District of Mississippi, alleging that the town violated the 14th Amendment by failing to provide municipal services to Shaw’s Black neighborhoods that were equal to those provided to white neighborhoods.140 Of particular note, the complaint alleged that Shaw had discriminated not only on the basis of race, but poverty as well: the inclusion of wealth discrimination was intended to mirror language from Supreme Court Justice Warren in McDonald v. Board of Election Commissioners of Chicago, where he cautioned that strict scrutiny of a governmental policy is “especially warranted where lines are drawn on the basis of wealth or race.”141 Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court dismissed LDF’s complaint, rejecting the existence of a constitutional right to equal municipal services.142 The court took great pains to justify the inadequate services in Shaw’s Black neighborhoods, noting that they could be explained by “substantial, rational considerations” like a static population and financial factors.143 For example, according to the court, the lack of sanitary sewers in certain areas was not the result of racial discrimination but a consequence of improper housing codes.144 The court further patronized the plaintiffs by advising them to exercise their right to vote if they wanted relief: as “Negro citizens have voting power approximately equal to that of white citizens,” any “problems” with unequal services “are to be resolved at the ballot box” (blatantly disregarding the long history of voting discrimination in this country).145 LDF appealed to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. In its appeal, LDF dropped the poverty claim, focusing instead on the need for application of strict judicial scrutiny of Shaw’s actions because the service disparities were based on race.146 In January 1971, the Fifth Circuit reversed the district court’s ruling, finding that the town had violated the constitutional guarantee of equal protection.147 Importantly, the three-judge panel began its opinion by stating: Referring to a portion of town or a segment of society as being ‘on the other side of the tracks’ has for too long been a familiar expression to most Americans. Such a phrase immediately conjures up an area characterized by poor housing, overcrowded conditions and, in short, overall deterioration. While there may be many reasons why such areas exist in nearly all of our cities, one reason that cannot be accepted is the discriminatory provision of municipal services based on race.148 The Fifth Circuit engaged in a careful review of the disparities in Shaw’s Black and white neighborhoods in street paving, street lights, sanitary sewers, surface water drainage, and water mains, and determined that they could not be justified by any compelling state interests.149 The court also noted that there was no evidence of intent to discriminate by Shaw or its officials, but held that the law was “clear” that no evidence of intent was required in a civil rights lawsuit alleging racial discrimination.150 To remedy the disparities in municipal services, the court ordered Shaw to submit a plan for its approval.151 15 Image: Segregated drinking fountain in use in the American South. Undated photograph. Sign reads “For colored only.” (Photo by Getty Images) Unsurprisingly, Shaw petitioned the Fifth Circuit for rehearing en banc. The full appellate court upheld the panel decision, agreeing that proof of intentional discrimination was not required and that the facts “squarely and certainly” supported the inference of clear overtones of racial discrimination in the provision of municipal services in Shaw.152 It also determined that the panel’s directive to the town to submit a plan to remedy the racial discrimination was a “sound approach.”153 Following the decision, Shaw expanded access to public services. By 2004 (when Dr. Troesken revisited the case), 97.5 percent of homes in the town had sewer access and 100 percent had access to the water system.154 At the time, legal analysts predicted that the Shaw decision would have significant consequences nationwide. LDF’s press release following the en banc decision noted that “the message is now clear to cities and towns across the South and hopefully throughout the nation; that the federal courts will no longer tolerate any inequality in the provision of municipal services to Black and minority group citizens.”155 In an editorial published in The New York Times in 1971, a writer reflected that the decision “throws open a broad new field of civil rights law” for the “many Shaws in America, North and South, in city ghettos and rural slums alike.”156 Another commentator wrote in the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review that “by providing the first precedent for invalidating varying patterns of municipal services,” the case would become “the progenitor of cases attacking the unequal provision of services.”157 However, just a few years later, the Supreme Court effectively limited the reach of Shaw by declaring in Washington v. Davis that an Equal Protection claim requires a plaintiff to meet the higher standard of proving intentional discrimination.158 In its opinion in Davis, the Court cited Shaw with disapproval in a footnote.159 Since then, very few municipalities have been found liable for racial discrimination in the provision of public water and sewer services under the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. 16 The 14th Friendliest City in America: Municipal Inequalities in Apopka, Florida160 While the Supreme Court made it more difficult for civil rights lawyers to challenge municipal inequalities through the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment, it’s still possible to succeed on such a claim— provided there is evidence of particularly stark racial disparities. One of the few post-Shaw cases in which a municipality was found liable of intentional discrimination involves Apopka, Florida, a small town near Orlando.161 In Dowdell v. City of Apopka, which was litigated in the early 1980s, Black residents sued the town, Mayor John Land, and city council members, alleging racial discrimination in the provision of municipal services in violation of the 14th Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VI).162 The plaintiffs alleged discrimination in the paving and maintenance of streets, storm water drainage facilities, the water distribution system, sewerage facilities, and parks and recreational facilities.163 Apopka’s water system was built after 1915, and its sewer system was constructed after 1922.164 The town is bisected by Highway 441, to which the Seaboard Coastline Railroad runs parallel. In 1937, a city ordinance was passed that prohibited Black residents from living on the northern side of the highway and railroad tracks and barred whites from living on the south side.165 The ordinance was not repealed until 1968.166 At the time of the lawsuit, Apopka was 30 percent Black and was rigidly segregated by race: nearly all Black families lived south of the highway and railroad tracks.167 The district court found that the city had virtually ignored complaints from Black residents about municipal services, while acting favorably on similar requests from white residents and directing financial attention to the white areas of town.168 The district court pointed to significant racial disparities in the various areas of concern cited by plaintiffs, including that: (1) 42 percent of streets in the Black community were unpaved, compared to only nine percent in white areas; (2) the Black community had virtually no storm water drainage facilities, compared to 60 percent of white homes that had curbs and gutters; (3) Black homes experienced extremely low water pressure, making bathing at times impossible; and (4) Black neighborhoods lacked sewer mains.169 The town, and its mayor, defended the suit by claiming that the services were beyond municipal jurisdiction or that the white side of town experienced the same issues.170 The court rejected these arguments, finding significant disparities in municipal services and holding the town liable for intentional discrimination.171 Apopka appealed, but the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s ruling.172 Citing factors from the Supreme Court’s decision in Village of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corp., the appellate court made clear that there was ample evidence of discriminatory intent, including the magnitude of the disparities, the legislative and administrative patterns of decision-making (including the 1937 ordinance, which “contributed to ghetto-like qualities of the Black residential area”), and the continued and systemic relative deprivation of the Black community.173 Here, the “totality of the relevant facts” supported the district court’s finding that Apopka had engaged in a systemic pattern of cognitive acts and omissions, which “inescapably evidence[d] discriminatory intent.”174 John Land served as mayor of Apopka for a total of 61 years, until 2014, when he lost his bid for reelection at age 93. He died later that year. In 2017, two bronze statues of Mayor Land were erected in town, and a local toll road is named after him.175 Apopka is still starkly segregated by race, and the 1937 ordinance continues to impact the Black population.176 17 Image: In October 1998, a family leaves Sunday church services in Lions, Louisiana surrounded by chemical plants. The poor and predominantly Black towns along the Mississippi River near Baton Rouge are known as “Cancer Alley” due to high cancer clusters and the presence of many chemical and oil production factories. (Photo by Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images) In the 1960s and 1970s, it became more evident that the risks of pollution were borne most heavily by Black communities, giving rise to the environmental justice movement.177 The early movement focused its efforts on the siting of toxic waste facilities in predominantly Black neighborhoods. In 1978, a majority-Black community in Houston successfully blocked a landfill from being placed in its town, in part due to a study from Dr. Robert D. Bullard, who established a connection between the location of waste landfills in Houston and race.178 In 1982, the Black community in Warren County, North Carolina banded together to protest the construction of a landfill for chemical waste disposal.179 Although the community was not successful in blocking the landfill, the Warren County protests “brought a sharper focus to the convergence of civil rights and environmental rights.”180 Studies from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in 1983 and the Commission for Racial Justice in 1987 were also instrumental in establishing a link between race and the location of toxic facilities.181 In the 1990s, environmental racism continued to gain traction as a significant issue impacting communities of color.182 In 1990, the National Law Journal published a study finding that EPA penalties differed in Black and white communities.183 That same year, the EPA established an Environmental Equity Working Group, which issued a report in 1992 confirming that minority and low-income communities are disproportionately exposed to environmental pollutants.184 In 1991, the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit drafted the 17 Principles of Environmental Justice, which outlined the three major components of environmental justice that remain relevant today: (1) no community should bear a disproportionate burden of environmental hazards; (2) all communities should have access to environmental benefits; and (3) decision-making processes need to be transparent and include community voices.185 In 1992, the EPA created an Office of Environmental Justice.186 The following year, the agency established a National Environmental Justice Advisory Committee to provide analysis and advice from stakeholders on environmental justice issues.187 In 1994, President Clinton signed Executive Order 12898, which directed agencies receiving federal funding to address the disproportionate environmental impacts of their policies and programs on communities of color and low-income communities.188 That order remains in effect today. 18 Despite these efforts, the federal government’s track record on environmental justice has been abysmal. Numerous independent studies have concluded that there has been “little effective or comprehensive implementation of environmental justice policies,”189 that environmental justice “has not yet been fully integrated into [the EPA’s] core mission or staff functions,”190 and that “federal agencies have not established accountability and performance outcomes for programs and activities.”191 In 2015, the Center for Public Integrity determined that the EPA’s civil rights office had not made one formal finding of discrimination under Title VI—which prohibits discrimination by recipients of federal funding—in 22 years, although hundreds of complaints had been filed.192 That same year, Earthjustice, an environmental justice nonprofit, filed a lawsuit against the EPA on behalf of five local community groups for failing to complete investigations of complaints that had been filed at least a decade prior, contravening Title VI’s regulations, which contain mandatory procedures and timelines for investigations of complaints.193 (Since 2016, LDF, along with Earthjustice, has represented one of the groups in their underlying EPA complaint, which was originally filed in 2003, regarding the siting of a landfill in a majority-Black community in Alabama.194) In 2016, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights released a report finding that the EPA was failing to meet its obligations under Title VI.195 Although it hardly seems possible, the current administration has curtailed environmental regulation and enforcement even further. In 2017, President Trump withdrew the United States from the Paris climate agreement, which had been signed by 195 nations in an attempt to address the impact of global rising temperatures.196 The agreement required the U.S. to cut greenhouse gas emissions and provide aid to poorer nations.197 That year, he also issued an Executive Order seeking to curtail the scope of the Clean Water Act.198 During his controversial tenure, former EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt shrunk the agency’s staff,199 removed references to climate change in the agency’s strategic plan,200 and overturned (or considered overturning) dozens of regulations, including related to sewage treatment.201 Given the dire state of environmentalism in general and environmental justice in particular, it is perhaps unsurprising that many water injustices impact communities of color today, including higher rates for water and sewer usage, disproportionate exposure to contaminants, zoning and land-use regulations that impede access to basic water infrastructure, and uneven enforcement of environmental regulations.202 While these issues all merit attention, Part II of this report focuses on water affordability and its impact on Black communities, including in Baltimore and Cleveland, two cities grappling with rising water rates. 19 part II: water in crisis Water should be free as air and should always be supplied by the government. -Captain M.C. Meigs, army engineer (1853)203 We believe there is a right to water and there is a right to affordable water. -Alice Jennings, lead attorney in Lyda v. City of Detroit, which challenged the Detroit shutoffs (2014)204 20 the high price of water Rising Rates and Failing Infrastructure In the last several decades, the price of water has increased exponentially. Between 1990 and 2006, water and wastewater bills increased by 105.7 percent nationally, although median household incomes increased only three percent per year.205 Put another way, if water and wastewater bills had increased only with the general rate of inflation during that time period, they would have decreased by 25 percent by 2006.206 For a family of four using 150 gallons per person a day, the average water bill increased nearly 60 percent between 2010 and 2018, from $71.53 to $112.04.207 Circle of Blue, an organization that conducts an annual study of residential water costs in 30 U.S. cities, determined in 2015 that the price of water rose faster than nearly every other household expense.208 In 2018 alone, water prices rose 3.3 percent—and even that was the smallest annual increase since 2010.209 By far, the biggest factor contributing to rising water costs in the United States is aging and failing infrastructure. Pipes installed at the beginning of the 20th century, in the post-World War II era, and during the 1970s Clean Water Act construction boom all require replacement now, due to varying materials and techniques used during these periods.210 Utilities nationwide have ranked the renewal and replacement of aging water and wastewater infrastructure as the most pressing issue facing the industry every year since at least 2014.211 But many municipalities are not making upgrades fast enough, and the nation’s water infrastructure is in a state of serious disrepair.212 At the current replacement rate, it will take another 200 years before the million pipes across the country are fully replaced.213 Given the poor condition of U.S. water infrastructure, the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), the nation’s oldest engineering society, issued its lowest grade (a D-) to drinking water and wastewater systems in 2009.214 (By 2017, these systems had apparently improved just enough to earn a D (drinking water)215 and D+ (wastewater)216 from ASCE.) When water infrastructure repairs and upgrades are put on the back burner, there are consequences. Failures in drinking water infrastructure can lead to significant issues, including water disruptions, impediments to emergency response, and unsanitary health conditions.217 Water main breaks are estimated to cost $2.6 billion annually.218 Drinking water pipe breaks can also be toxic to fish, and sewer pipe leaks can contaminate water with pathogens and organic matter.219 But infrastructure upgrades are costly. The EPA has estimated that nearly $400 billion must be spent by 2030 to keep the country’s water systems operating properly and that $655 billion will be needed for both drinking water and wastewater infrastructure over the next 20 years.220 In an alternative survey of infrastructure needs, the world’s largest organization of water supply professionals, the American Water Works Association (AWWA), estimated that restoring existing water systems will cost at least $1 trillion over the next 25 years and that the investment required to replace pipes and maintain current levels of water service could triple water bills in the most affected communities.221 And these estimates don’t even include cities’ costs to comply with the Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Water Act (including under court-enforced consent decrees), which also drive up water rates.222 Nor do they include the effects of climate change (resulting in more severe storms in the East and Midwest, and drought in the South and West), which will place additional strain on U.S. water systems at a projected cost of more than $36 billion by 2050.223 By virtually any estimate, cities do not have the funds for these repairs and upgrades.224 While utilities generally issue or sell tax-exempt municipal bonds or obtain other loans to fund large water infrastructure projects, which they repay through the fees paid by customers,225 many cities are massively in debt—estimated to total $1.7 trillion nationwide—and are unable to take on additional projects.226 Further, as discussed above, federal in21 vestment in water and wastewater systems has waned since the late 1970s. Since then, federal funding for water infrastructure has decreased by 74 percent.227 According to an analysis by the watchdog agency, Food & Water Watch, in 1977, the federal government spent $76.27 (in 2014 dollars) per person on water services.228 By 2014, that amount had decreased to $13.68 per person. States have also decreased their spending on water and wastewater systems.229 As a result, these costs must be borne by local governments. Water Privatization While publicly-owned utilities serve 88 percent of customers in the U.S. with piped water service,230 privatization is once again on the rise as municipalities struggle to fund water system improvements.231 In recent decades, private companies hired by municipalities may handle a range of duties, from specific services like billing or maintenance to complete control over a city’s waterworks.232 Generally, municipalities may look to privatize part or all of their waterworks due to budget concerns or decreased federal funding—in fact, President Trump’s “infrastructure plan” includes a $100 billion fund to stimulate private sector involvement in water infrastructure repairs.233 But water privatization generally means higher prices for customers. In 2016, Food & Water Watch determined that privately-owned water utilities charge customers, on average, 59 percent more for water service.234 After Bayonne, New Jersey signed a 40-year lease to privatize its system in 2012, rates had increased 28 percent by 2016, despite the promise of a four-year price freeze.235 In Rialto, California, rates rose 68 percent after the town’s water system was privatized.236 And while the private companies must often tackle needed infrastructure repairs when they take over a waterworks system, accounting for some of the rise in rates, they also take a profit from customer revenue.237 Of particular concern, the privatization of water services can have a particular and disproportionate impact on communities of color, including higher rates and increased risk of service interruptions.238 (And, as in the past, there are quality concerns as well. The French firm Veolia, the world’s largest private water company, was sued for its role in the lead crises in both Flint and Pittsburgh.239 In 2015, Veolia issued a report finding that Flint’s water met federal and state guidelines, but failed to report on the presence of lead in the water.240 Veolia was also hired to oversee Pittsburgh’s water system from 2012 to 2015, and the city experienced a lead crisis in 2016.241 The Michigan Attorney General and the Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority both sued Veolia in 2016.242) But the tide may be turning once again against the private companies and toward a renewed commitment that the provision of water is a public good, for the public good. In 2018, Baltimore became the first major city in the U.S. to ban water privatization when 77 percent of voters approved a charter amendment declaring the water system to be a permanent, inalienable asset of the city.243 22 Water Pricing Interestingly, one significant reason for the gap between the funds needed for infrastructure improvements and municipalities’ budgets may be that water has been underpriced for too long.244 (Citizens of most developed countries already pay twice as much for their water as the average American.245) Given the lack of federal funding, utility customers provide the vast majority of funds needed to operate water and wastewater systems, and may not be paying enough.246 In The Big Thirst, Mr. Fishman aptly described the economics of water as “a mash-up of tradition, wishful thinking, and poor planning.”247 The U.S. Conference of Mayors has estimated that cities fail to collect at least 10 to 20 percent of the funds needed for infrastructure upgrades.248 ASCE has estimated that the total investment gap for water and wastewater upgrades is expected to total at least $100 billion by 2025 and over $150 billion by 2040.249 The EPA also estimated that water and wastewater utilities need to secure at least $300 billion by 2030 to account for this investment gap.250 Water in the U.S. is not priced according to supply and demand, even in local areas.251 This is because “people do not really demand water infrastructure,” per Dr. Rachel Butts and Dr. Stephen Gasteyer, who conducted a study of water and racial inequalities in Michigan, but rather “it is supplied as a matter of policy.”252 In fact, it may have been a disservice for utilities to price water so low for so long, since customers may not fully appreciate its value: in a recent report, utilities ranked “public understanding of the value of water systems and services” and “public understanding of the value of water” as the third and fifth most pressing issues, respectively.253 While AWWA encourages utilities to employ “full cost pricing,” meaning that consumer rates and fees should cover the cost of providing services as well as renewing, updating, or expanding infrastructure, the typical water bill simply covers the cost of delivering the water.254 According to a 2018 AWWA survey, only 21 percent of utilities believe they can cover the full cost of services through rates and fees.255 So how is water priced? Utilities have a significant amount of leeway to set prices, subject to a general requirement that rates must be reasonable, not unduly discriminatory, and grant no unwarranted preference to one group of customers over another.256 There are a few typical rate structures, including (1) increasing block rate, where the price of water increases with usage; (2) uniform rate, where customers are charged a constant price per gallon, regardless of usage; and (3) decreasing block rate, where the price of water declines with usage.257 Charging customers by volume used can create issues for utilities, as approximately 80 percent of costs are fixed, regardless of water consumption.258 As a result, many utilities are moving to a rate structure based on fixed fees rather than consumption-based fees in order to recover more revenue in light of decreased water usage.259 But water is inherently local, and not all water is priced the same. Water bills across the nation vary widely, based on the age of the infrastructure, variations in the cost of energy and labor, and political dynamics.260 The population of a waterworks’ customer base also plays a significant role: generally, bills decrease when more households access the local water supply.261 Areas of the United States that were previously focused on manufacturing, like the Midwest and Northeast, may be subject to additional water costs resulting from population decline, underutilized infrastructure (such as abandoned factories), and poverty.262 For example, Detroit lost over 61 percent of its population between 1950 and 2010, passing on the costs required to maintain and upgrade its failing water infrastructure to a smaller customer base.263 Other factors can affect the price of water, including quality, distance to supply, and other economies of scale.264 Using data from Circle of Blue, the chart below reflects how widely water bills vary across the nation (and note that sewer bills add additional costs): 23 Table 1: Average Monthly Water Bills in 30 U.S. Cities, 2018265 City Average Monthly Bill Santa Fe San Francisco San Diego Austin Los Angeles Seattle Atlanta Tucson Boston Charlotte Houston San Jose San Antonio Philadelphia Indianapolis Dallas New York City Columbus Fort Worth Baltimore Las Vegas Phoenix Chicago Detroit Jacksonville Denver Milwaukee Fresno Salt Lake City Memphis $284.10 $209.71 $198.83 $197.37 $182.71 $160.34 $141.20 $140.49 $131.00 $130.63 $118.94 $112.62 $111.77 $107.84 $96.85 $96.30 $91.44 $83.54 $83.20 $79.26 $75.82 $71.58 $69.84 $64.04 $63.49 $62.10 $58.99 $48.08 $44.63 $44.52 24 Image: General view of Downtown Detroit, Including factories on banks of Detroit River, October 27, 1964. (Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images) Notwithstanding these varying factors, it is undisputed that rising water costs will have to be paid by customers.266 And as the price of water increases, more people are unable to pay their bills. In 2010, a report sponsored by the EPA and Water Research Foundation found that low-income households “will find it increasingly more difficult to pay their water and wastewater bills” and even higher-income households may not be able to afford their bills in light of competing needs, such as higher energy and food costs.267 When customers cannot afford their water bills, utilities take in less revenue, which makes it more difficult—if not impossible—to fund needed infrastructure improvements. For example, Detroit estimated that it lost $40 to $50 million in revenue in recent years due to a low collection rate, and Gary, Indiana saw no increase in revenue despite raising rates 30 percent in 2011.268 25 Measuring Water Affordability Water is generally considered “affordable” when families spend no more than two to 2.5 percent of their median household incomes for water services269 or 4.5 percent for combined water and wastewater services.270 While median household income is the most common benchmark to measure water affordability, it has been soundly criticized. Somewhat shockingly, there is apparently no social science research to support the two/2.5 percent or 4.5 percent benchmarks for affordability.271 The two percent median household income measure first emerged in 1997 guidance from the EPA, but included “no methodological or theoretical explanation.”272 And multiple studies have shown that current income is not sufficient to measure the toll of individual economic hardships, given that families differ in size, access to credit, standards of living, and demands on resources.273 Other indicators may more accurately gauge whether bills are affordable for families, including the level of arrearages, the rate at which service is disconnected, whether the customer or household can pay the bill without compromising the ability to pay for other services, and the accessibility and availability of low-income and other assistance programs.274 The EPA’s Environmental Financial Advisory Board has recommended that the agency use the lowest 20th percentile of income as a measure of a household’s ability to afford a rate increase.275 But regardless of the metric used, it is difficult to estimate how many people across the nation are unable to afford their water bills, given the general lack of data.276 There is no requirement in the United States for municipalities or utilities to collect data on water affordability, rate increases, or infrastructure investments.277 For example, in 2014, when its water shutoff crisis began, Detroit officials revealed that they did not collect any data on the number of people living without tap water, or on the age, disability, chronic illness, race, or income level of the affected population.”278 Similarly, in 2017, the Baltimore Department of Public Works stated that the city does not retain information on the total amount of payments received from residential customers, the average arrears for all residential accounts, the average bill for all residential accounts in arrears, or the number of accounts receiving a notice of disconnection for nonpayment.279 Despite this lack of available data, various studies demonstrate the increasing unaffordability of water. The 2010 study sponsored by the EPA and Water Research Foundation estimated that 15 percent of residential water customers are constantly at risk of payment problems.280 In 2016, the GAO released a study of 10 cities, which showed that in four of them, the average water and wastewater bill was more than eight percent of income for low-income households.281 And in 2017, a significant amount of media attention was given to a new study that estimated that millions of Americans would be unable to afford their water bills in just a few years.282 In that study, two researchers from Michigan State University, Dr. Elizabeth A. Mack and Sarah Wrase, concluded that more than a third of U.S. households may be unable to afford their water bills in the next five years, if bills continue to increase at their current rates.283 To measure affordability, Dr. Mack and Ms. Wrase used the EPA’s 4.5 percent benchmark for combined water and wastewater bills, meaning that they considered these bills to be unaffordable if they exceeded 4.5 percent of a household’s median income.284 They also calculated the average annual water and sewer bill to be $1,686, using data from AWWA and Circle of Blue.285 Given the amount of the average bill, and using nationwide median household income data, Dr. Mack and Ms. Wrase determined that households need to earn at least $32,000 per year in order to meet the 4.5 percent affordability cutoff.286 Approximately 13.8 million households (11.9 percent) in the U.S. have incomes below this threshold and thus must allocate more than 4.5 percent of their incomes to their water and wastewater bills.287 Therefore, water and wastewater services are currently unaffordable for these families. Dr. Mack and Ms. Wrase projected that the percentage of households that will be unable to afford their water and wastewater bills will greatly increase over time. If bills continue to rise by six percent annually, 14.7 percent of U.S. households will face affordability challenges.288 If bills increase by 41 percent over the next five years (the average rise between 2010 and 2015), an estimated 35.6 percent of U.S. households will not be able to afford their water and wastewater bills.289 26 Image: Demonstrators in Detroit demand action on the water crisis in Flint, March 3, 2016. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) 27 The Collateral Consequences of Water Bills: When Failing to Pay Means Losing Your Home, Your Health, Your Kid, or Your Freedom Losing Your Home (and Your Health) Families can lose their homes (either practically or literally) and can suffer health risks for the failure to pay their water bills. Service Disconnections In recent years, water shutoffs have significantly increased as utilities have become more aggressive in their collection practices, particularly after the Great Recession when many cities struggled financially.290 As recognized by the EPA, a water service disconnection amounts to a practical eviction, as the home may be deemed uninhabitable.291 In one extreme example, the city of Easton, Pennsylvania had a policy of evicting residents when their water service was disconnected for nonpayment and required a code inspection and repair of any code violations before water service could be reconnected (the city has since changed its law).292 Water shutoffs also pose a threat to public health and human dignity.293 Without access to running water, families are unable to cook, bathe, clean, or flush their toilets. Additionally, families may forego medical expenses or food in order to pay their water bills.294 Detroit is the most well-known example of a city facing a water shutoff crisis. In 2014, approximately 44,000 households in the city had their water service disconnected for nonpayment of bills.295 With the ACLU of Michigan, LDF advocated for a moratorium on the shutoffs and expressed grave concern over the racial impact of the shutoff policy.296 Despite this advocacy, and the international attention given to the shutoffs, they have continued; in 2016, there were 28,000 service interruptions and nearly 18,000 were at risk of losing service in Detroit in May 2018.297 In 2017, experts issued preliminary findings that city blocks that experienced water shutoffs were 1.55 times as likely to experience water-related illnesses as blocks with no shutoffs.298 But Detroit is not alone. Among many other examples, about one in five customers in New Orleans and Gary, Indiana had their water service disconnected in 2015, and about one in eight customers lost their water service in Birmingham, Alabama and Youngstown, Ohio, respectively.299 More recently, a 2019 report by APM Reports, Great Lakes Today, and National Public Radio (NPR) found that utilities in Chicago, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Detroit, Buffalo, and Duluth collectively issued nearly 370,000 shutoff notices over the last decade.300 Water Liens Every state has a process authorizing local governments to place liens on properties when homeowners fail to pay property taxes or certain municipal charges, including for water and sewer services.301 In many states, if the homeowner does not satisfy the lien (including interest and costs), they can lose their home at tax sale or their lien might be sold to a private investor, who can later evict them.302 Water and sewer liens are particularly problematic, as the homeowner or tenant may lose their home for an unpaid bill of just a few hundred dollars. These liens have a potentially devastating impact on homeownership rates and have been shown to disproportionately impact communities of color, as detailed below in the city studies of Baltimore and Cleveland. While most are familiar with Flint’s water contamination crisis (also discussed below), the city’s water lien crisis has not garnered as much attention. In 2017, about 8,000 Flint homeowners were warned that they were at risk of losing their homes through tax foreclosure for failure to pay their bills for (contaminated) water. LDF, once again in collaboration with the ACLU of Michigan, persuaded the city to suspend efforts to place property liens on homes with unpaid water bills.303 While Flint resumed its water lien practice in 2018, the city agreed in 2019 not to place liens on owner-occupied properties and the Genesee County treasurer has stated that she will not proceed with any foreclosures based on unpaid water bills while Flint is under a water emergency.304 LDF continues to monitor this situation. Further advocacy may be needed to ensure that Flint residents are not at risk of losing their homes due to unpaid water bills. 28 Losing Your Family In many states, the lack of water service may impact parents’ ability to retain custody of their children. For example, in Michigan, the lack of running water is a factor in determining whether parents are providing a suitable home for their children.305 Losing Your Freedom In some states, the inability to pay for water and sanitation services can lead to criminal charges or other legal action.306 In Detroit, residents can face felony criminal charges for reconnecting their water without permission from the utility.307 In Baltimore, it is a misdemeanor to reconnect a water supply after a service disconnection.308 And in Alabama, it is a misdemeanor to build, maintain, or use a sewage system that is not sanitary, which can place significant financial burdens on families.309 Image: A worker turns off the water supply to a home in Detroit on August 27, 2014. The Detroit Water and Sewer Department has disconnected water to thousands of Detroit residents who are delinquent on their bills. (Photo by Joshua Lott/Getty Images) 29 Water Affordability Programs While there is a federal program to help low-income households with the costs of heating and cooling their homes, called the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP),310 there is no equivalent federal law requiring states to ensure that water is affordable or establish programs for low-income customers.311 The Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Water Act address water affordability only indirectly: the Clean Water Act and its implementing regulations recognize that lower water charges may be appropriate for impoverished customers; the Safe Drinking Water Act allows the EPA to grant variances to local governments if compliance with the statute would be unaffordable for the municipality.312 But there have been attempts to enact federal legislation related to water affordability. In June 2018, U.S. Senator Kamala Harris introduced the Water Affordability Act to help low-income families pay their water and sewer bills.313 The bill would have required the EPA to award grants to public utilities to assist low-income families with their bills.314 Additionally, in April 2018, U.S. Representative Keith Ellison introduced the Water Affordability, Transparency, Equity, and Reliability (WATER) Act, which would have provided billions in federal funding for water and wastewater improvements.315 Neither bill passed during the 115th session of Congress, although the WATER Act was reintroduced in the House and Senate in February 2019, during the 116th session. During the Obama administration, the EPA did officially recognize the financial challenges faced by many municipalities in meeting their federal compliance obligations under the Clean Water Act.316 In a memorandum to local governments, the agency encouraged municipalities to consider rate structures to ensure that lower-income households can continue to afford vital wastewater services.317 It also developed a Financial Capability Assessment Framework to assess a community’s ability to meet Clean Water Act objectives.318 The framework estimates the impact of statutory compliance on both residential customers and the relevant jurisdiction as a whole.319 It includes a list of considerations that may be useful in evaluating financial capability, including the income distribution of the community; poverty rates and trends; water and wastewater fees as a percentage of household income; unemployment data; and data on late payments, disconnections, and service terminations.320 Despite this framework, it is unclear to what extent the EPA is determining that municipalities are unable to afford their federal compliance costs.321 More recently, in October 2017, the National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA), in response to a directive from Congress, issued a lengthy report on the EPA’s metrics for water affordability.322 Among other recommendations, NAPA urged the EPA to revise its affordability standards to (1) include all water costs, including planned infrastructure costs, when determining the financial burden on a municipality to comply with federal law; (2) focus on the incomes of the customers most vulnerable to rate increases, rather than median household income; (3) identify the population of vulnerable users in a given municipality; and (4) avoid arbitrary normative thresholds when determining the cost burden on a municipality.323 In response to the report, the EPA was vague, telling Circle of Blue that it “look[s] forward to using this information to help communities and utilities fund their infrastructure needs while ensuring services remain affordable.”324 The agency stated that it agreed with many of the report’s recommendations, but would not elaborate further.325 If the agency does revise its affordability metrics, it could have a trickle-down effect on water rates, as municipalities would be granted more time to make infrastructure upgrades to comply with federal law.326 Ultimately, though, system improvements would need to be made, or water quality in these communities would suffer.327 For now, affordability, like water delivery itself, is a local matter. But the legal requirements that rates must be “reasonable” and “non-discriminatory” (mentioned above) have proven to be a roadblock for many affordability programs.328 Many state utility commissions and courts have determined that these requirements mean that utilities cannot use rate revenues to fund affordability programs for low-income customers; in other words, higher-income customers cannot subsidize water costs for poorer families.329 In fact, in 2017, the University of North Carolina’s Environmental Finance Center determined that state laws present an obstacle for utilities to implement customer affordability programs in nearly every state.330 These restrictions vary: in Maryland, private water and wastewater companies are prohibited from implementing affordability programs that are subsidized by customers, but public utilities are not so restricted and most counties in the state operate under 30 individual charters, allowing them to implement such programs.331 In California, there is express statutory authorization for private water and wastewater companies to administer customer affordability programs using rate revenues, but public utilities in the state are prohibited from doing so.332 Michigan grants utilities broad rate-setting powers, but the Headlee Amendment to the state Constitution, prohibiting local governments from raising taxes without voter approval, has been interpreted to mean that rate revenues cannot be used to subsidize a water affordability program.333 Fortunately, many utilities have worked around this bar by funding affordability programs through other means. For example, in areas of California with public systems, these programs are funded by property tax revenues.334 Detroit has sought to implement programs that do not violate the Headlee Amendment, and currently has a customer assistance program that freezes arrearages for a year, provides $25 in bill discounts per month, and offers $700 toward past due amounts.335 And in 2017, Philadelphia launched an innovative water affordability program, discussed further below. According to AWWA, 48 percent of utilities nationwide offered some kind of affordability program in 2018, up from 37 percent in 2017 and only 14 percent in 2002.336 The benefits of affordability programs are not limited to the customer: these programs have been found to increase bill payment rates and bring in additional revenue for utilities to fund much-needed infrastructure improvements.337 Water affordability programs vary by jurisdiction. Many utilities offer bill discounts, through either a percentage discount on the total bill or a discount on a particular portion of the bill.338 Utilities may also offer rate structures with lower fixed charges, which are more beneficial for low-income customers (although, as stated above, fixed charges are becoming more common)339 or rate structures that use increasing block rates or seasonal rates, which can also reduce bills for low-income families.340 Bill timing adjustments (for example, issuing water bills monthly rather than quarterly) have been shown to increase payment rates.341 Some utilities may exempt low-income households from the costs associated with setting up a new account, such as new account fees or deposits.342 Utilities may also offer payment plans, through which a customer with arrearages makes a down payment and then agrees to pay the remaining balance owed over a period of time. The size of the required down payment and accuracy of the bill are critical when evaluating whether these programs are helpful for low-income customers.343 Water Affordability and Black Communities Rising water and sewer rates are likely to disproportionately impact communities of color.344 Dr. Stephen Gasteyer, a sociologist with expertise in water access issues, told Circle of Blue in 2016 that water infrastructure is crumbling in places without the ability to absorb the cost—and those who are left in these cities are people of color.345 According to Dr. Gasteyer, “where you see things falling apart are predominantly minority communities.”346 Despite this finding, there are limited studies examining the intersection between water affordability and race. A new 2019 study determined that water shutoffs in cities in the Great Lakes region have been concentrated in Black and Latinx neighborhoods over the last decade.347 In 2011, Dr. Gasteyer and Dr. Rachel Butts examined the cost of water in Michigan counties and determined that prices were higher in areas with a greater proportion of racial minorities, even after controlling for various factors, including income.348 In Dr. Mack and Ms. Wrase’s 2017 study of water affordability, they observed that Black and Latinx households have median incomes substantially lower than whites and thus are more likely to have water affordability challenges.349 Similarly, in 2016, a Detroit-based group called We the People examined water shutoffs in the city and determined there was a widespread impact on African-American neighborhoods.350 In Boston, Massachusetts Global Action (MGA) studied the relationship between income, race, and water access through its 2012 Color of Water project.351 In examining data from 2007 to 2011 on water shutoff notices, MGA found a “strong, persistent” relationship between race and water access.352 For every two percent increase in people of color by city ward, there was a corresponding three percent increase in the likelihood of a water shutoff notice being issued.353 31 The Human Right to Water Access to clean and affordable water has been recognized as a human rights issue in recent years. In 2002, the United Nations (UN) Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights adopted General Comment 15 on the human right to water.354 In the comment, the committee recognized that everyone is entitled to sufficient, safe, acceptable, physically accessible, and affordable water for personal and domestic uses.355 The comment also explained that water should be free from discrimination and should be informationally accessible, so that people can seek, receive, and impart information on water issues.356 In 2005, the UN’s Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights built on this work, adopting Guidelines for the Realization of the Right to Drinking Water and Sanitation.357 The guidelines contained affordability measures, including the promotion of flexible payment schemes and subsidies for low-income households.358 The next year, the former High Commissioner for Human Rights presented a study to the Human Rights Council on the scope and content of the relevant human rights obligations related to equitable access of safe drinking water and sanitation.359 In the study, the former Higher Commissioner stated that it is “now time to consider access to safe drinking water and sanitation as a human right, defined as the right to equal and non-discriminatory access to a sufficient amount of safe drinking water for personal and domestic uses.”360 In 2008, the UN appointed a Special Rapporteur to examine the human rights to safe drinking water and sanitation and to make recommendations.361 As part of the Special Rapporteur’s mandate, an independent expert from the UN visited the United States in 2011 and raised a number of concerns at the conclusion of her visit, including that the U.S. must do more to eliminate discrimination in access to safe drinking water and sanitation and ensure that water and sanitation are available at a price people can afford.362 In a written response to the Special Rapporteur, the United States ducked responsibility, stating that the issues raised would be “most feasibly handled” at the state or local level rather than through federal action.363 In 2010, the UN General Assembly declared that drinking water is a human right.364 In so doing, the UN made clear that people must be able to access drinking water and sanitation services that are safe, acceptable, and affordable.365 In 2012, California passed a law—the first in the nation—establishing the human right to water.366 The law recognizes that “every human being has the right to safe, clean, affordable, and accessible water adequate for human consumption, cooking, and sanitary purposes.”367 The UN Human Rights Council also recognized the human right to water in 2010 and 2011.368 In 2015, the General Assembly reaffirmed that the right to sanitation is part of an adequate standard of living, recognizing it as distinct from the right to water.369 (On June 19, 2018, the United States withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council.370) Further research is needed to determine the full impact of rising water bills on communities of color. Below, the city studies of Baltimore and Cleveland provide an overview on the water issues faced by these jurisdictions and establish a clear connection between race, water affordability, and homeownership. 32 city studies Baltimore, Maryland Water and Wastewater Bills in Baltimore Baltimore’s water rates have risen more rapidly than the national average. When measured either from 2006 to 2016 or from 2010 to 2018, the cost of water service in Baltimore increased by 127 percent.371 Annual bills for combined water and wastewater services for residential customers increased 37 percent between 2014 and 2018 alone, from an average of $517.26 to $787.58.372 Each year between 2016 and 2018, water rates rose 9.9 percent and sewer rates rose by nine percent.373 In January 2019, the city approved another 30 percent rate increase over the next three years.374 According to calculations by attorney and economist Roger Colton, the average customer’s water bill is expected to rise to $1,115 by 2022, more than triple the average bill of $350 in 2010.375 There are several factors driving Baltimore’s increased water and wastewater rates. Similar to other parts of the nation, Baltimore’s water infrastructure needs to be replaced due to old age.376 Baltimore’s plans to upgrade and improve its water and wastewater systems are expected to cost $2 billion.377 Since 2005, Baltimore has been operating under a costly consent decree with the EPA to resolve allegations that it violated the Clean Water Act by discharging untreated sewage into the Chesapeake Bay.378 Through 2016, Baltimore spent close to $900 million diagnosing problems in its sewer system and designing fixes.379 Revenue from residents’ rising water bills funded this work.380 Despite these efforts, the city’s sewer system was still in need of significant repairs, with thousands of residents reporting sewage backups into their homes.381 The consent decree was renewed in 2016, and the projects provided for in the revised decree were expected to cost $630.1 million in fiscal year 2017 and an additional $548.4 million by 2030.382 In addition to the sewage system upgrades, the city launched a $160 million project to retrofit a drinking water reservoir in 2017.383 In February 2019, the city announced that it had received a federal loan of over $200 million from the EPA to fund upgrades to its wastewater infrastructure.384 Most counties in Maryland, as well as the city of Baltimore, operate under home rule charter or code.385 This means that government-owned water and wastewater companies are not regulated by the Maryland Public Service Commission and have broad powers to set their own rates, subject to a general “reasonableness” requirement.386 Baltimore’s Public Works (DPW) and Finance Departments set water rates in the city, subject to approval by the Board of Estimates.387 In 2016, Baltimore made several changes to its billing system, converting to a system called “BaltiMeter Billing,” with meters that monitor hourly water consumption.388 Under the new system, customers are billed monthly, only for actual water used.389 The city also changed its rate structure, from a declining block structure (where low-volume users paid a higher rate than high-volume users) to a flat rate for all customers.390 Customers are also charged fixed monthly fees based on meter size.391 Baltimore’s old billing system, which the city used for 40 years, was rife with errors.392 Previously, customers were billed quarterly, based on estimated usage.393 In 2012, after a comprehensive audit, the city refunded $4.2 million to 38,000 households for overbilling between 2009 and 2012.394 In 2014, another audit of the city’s water billing system revealed additional “systemic errors and limitations” affecting 70,000 accounts, but no refunds were issued.395 And the city’s new system is still working out the kinks. In February 2018, close to 600 customers received erroneous bills for more than $50,000 each, which the city promptly corrected.396 33 At the same time that Baltimore unveiled its new billing system, it also changed the way that residents can contest their water bills. In 2016, DPW eliminated an informal hearing process that allowed customers to challenge their bills through a third-party contractor, who could recommend billing adjustments.397 Now, customers can only complain about their bills through a written process.398 The form to request a water or sewer adjustment can be found on DPW’s website, and appears to only provide for account adjustments for leakage issues.399 The form makes clear that a request for an adjustment does not guarantee that a credit will be applied to a customer’s bill, and states that customers will be notified by phone or letter if a request is denied or additional information is needed.400 In order to submit a request, customers must verify that they have made any necessary repairs to remedy a leak.401 Given Baltimore’s high rates, it’s no surprise that many residents are unable to afford their water bills. In 2016, 15 percent of residential customers in the city were in arrears, for a total debt of just over $20 million.402 In November 2017, a study of water affordability in Baltimore by Mr. Colton for Food & Water Watch concluded that by this year, water and wastewater bills will be unaffordable in more than half of city households with median incomes, using the two percent affordability benchmark.403 For households with incomes at or below 150 percent of the federal poverty level, bills will not be affordable anywhere in the city this year.404 Baltimore does have several programs to help residents pay their water and sewer bills. The city offers an annual credit of $236 for residents in arrears with incomes below 175 percent of the federal poverty level (a maximum income of $43,925 for a family of four).405 Low-income residents can also be exempted from paying the monthly fixed fees, and residents with a qualifying medical condition can be spared from water shutoffs.406 Low-income seniors are eligible for a 43 percent discount on their water and sewer bills.407 The city also offers a payment plan program for homeowners and tenants in arrears, allowing them up to one year to pay a past due amount without penalties.408 The city does not require a down payment if the arrears are paid within six months; it requires a 50 percent up-front payment for 12-month plans.409 Additionally, in January 2019, at the same time that the most recent rate increases were approved, DPW received approval from the Board of Estimates for a new low-income water affordability program, called Baltimore H2O Assists.410 The program, which takes effect on July 1, 2019, will reduce water and sewer charges by 43 percent for city residents with incomes below 175 percent of the federal poverty level.411 As a result of local advocacy and legislative efforts at the city and state level, further relief from rising water bills may be on the horizon for Baltimore residents, as described further below. 34 Water Affordability and Race in Baltimore As of July 2017, the population of the city of Baltimore totaled 611,648.412 Sixty-three percent of the city’s population is Black; 28 percent is white; and close to five percent is Latinx.413 Of the 200 census tracts in Baltimore, 132 are majority-Black. Twenty-three percent of residents are impoverished.414 Building on Roger Colton’s analysis of water affordability in the city, LDF examined to what extent water bills will be unaffordable for Baltimore’s Black population in fiscal years 2019 and 2020.415 To conduct this analysis, LDF used Mr. Colton’s projections that water and wastewater bills will total $860.96 in 2019 and $938.45 in 2020 and compared these figures to the two percent affordability threshold and Black median income. Given that the most current income data is from 2014, LDF adjusted income at an increase of one percent per year (a five percent adjustment for 2019 and six percent for 2020). In 2019, water bills will exceed two percent of Black median income in 118 of 200 census tracts. Sixty-five percent of the Black population in Baltimore lives in these tracts. Only 19 of the 118 tracts are not majority-Black. In 98 tracts, bills will range from two to four percent of Black median income. Eighty-three of these tracts are majority-Black. In 15 tracts, 12 of which are majority-Black, households will have to spend four to six percent of their incomes on water bills. In five tracts, water will cost six to eight percent of Black median income. Four of those five tracts are majority-Black (the fifth is 34 percent Black). The map below demonstrates how severely majority-Black tracts will be impacted by rising water bills this year. Map 1: Projected 2019 Water Bills as a Percentage of Black Median Income in Baltimore 35 And the problem will worsen next year. In 2020, water bills will exceed two percent of Black median income in 131 of 200 census tracts. Only 23 of the 131 tracts are not majority-Black. In 106 tracts, bills will range from two to four percent of Black median income. Eighty-eight of these tracts are majority-Black. In 18 tracts, 14 of which are majority-Black, households will have to spend four to six percent of their incomes on water bills. In eight tracts, water will cost six to eight percent of Black median income. Seven of these tracts are majority-Black (as in 2019, the eighth is 34 percent Black). The map below shows the distribution of rising water bills in 2020 by the percentage of Black median income in Baltimore’s 200 census tracts. Map 2: Projected 2020 Water Bills as a Percentage of Black Median Income in Baltimore 36 Philadelphia’s Innovative Plan to Make Water Affordable Philadelphia has emerged as a leader in the fight to make water affordable for all. On July 1, 2017, the city unveiled its new water affordability program, the Tiered Assistance Program (TAP).425 Approximately 60,000 residents were expected to be eligible for TAP, for which the city budgeted $15 million, although only 13,000 customers registered for the program in its first year.426 While a resident does not need to be in arrears to qualify, past due overages are suspended and not enforced during enrollment in the program.427 Those who qualify, either because they earn below 150 percent of the federal poverty level or have a special hardship (decided on a case-by-case basis), receive an income-based, consistent monthly bill.428 The minimum bill is $12, and participating households pay between two and three percent (depending on their poverty level) of their incomes toward their water bills.429 Households with high levels of consumption receive free leak tests and more efficient plumbing fixtures.430 The TAP program replaced Philadelphia’s Water Revenue Assistance Program (WRAP), which was only available to owner-occupants who were already behind on their bills. The old program also had a cumbersome application process and only enrolled about 5,500 participants.431 WRAP was clearly not enough to support the city’s low-income customers in paying their bills, as Philadelphia was in the throes of a water shutoff crisis prior to implementation of the TAP program. Water rates in the city had increased 30 percent between 2010 and 2017, and customers collectively owed $170 million in arrearages to the water department.432 In the five years before TAP was instituted, approximately 86,000 customers (one in five in the city) had their water service disconnected for failure to pay their bills, including a disproportionate number of Black and Latinx households.433 37 Failure to Pay Water or Sewer Bills in Baltimore In the last several years, Baltimore has been aggressive in handling delinquent water and wastewater accounts. The city may disconnect water service to any customer who owes at least $250 over two months of billing.416 In 2015, Baltimore sent shutoff notices to 25,000 residential and commercial customers (approximately 60,000 individuals417) in both the city and county who collectively owed more than $40 million in unpaid bills.418 Ultimately, it disconnected service to 8,100 residential properties, with only half getting water restored after settling their accounts (including paying a shutoff fee of almost $100).419 At the time, City Council President (who is serving as acting mayor as of May 2019) Bernard C. “Jack” Young expressed support of the impending shutoffs, noting that “I like it better than taking people’s houses and putting them into foreclosure” (more on that below).420 Prior to 2015, the city had typically shut off water service to around 3,000 customers per year.421 Baltimore ramped up its disconnection practice after it rectified its billing errors and had more confidence that water bills were accurate.422 In 2016, the city disconnected service to 1,385 customers for failure to pay their water bills.423 In addition to shutoffs, Baltimore residents have lost their homes for the failure to pay water bills as small as $350. Until only recently, when a temporary—and now permanent—ban has barred the practice, Baltimore placed liens on homes for the failure to pay water or wastewater bills and sold those liens in the city’s annual property tax auctions.424 Water Liens in Maryland Maryland’s tax sale process dates back to at least the 19th century.434 Maryland defines “tax” broadly, to include “any charge of any kind due to the State or any of its political subdivisions,” and thus any kind of municipal lien may be included in the annual tax sale, including liens for unpaid water bills.435 Maryland also allows local jurisdictions the discretion to determine which kinds of debt should be included in tax sales.436 While 90 percent of jurisdictions across the state include water debt, property taxes, and other charges in their annual sales, some Maryland municipalities sell very few to no properties each year through tax auctions.437 Others are more aggressive, selling thousands of homes annually for failure to pay taxes and other charges.438 Maryland homeowners receive their property tax bills on July 1,439 and additional penalties and interest are added if they are not paid by October 1.440 Once taxes (including municipal charges, if relevant) are delinquent, a lien can be placed on the property and sold at the jurisdiction’s annual auction.441 The tax lien takes precedence over a mortgage on the property.442 Prior to the auction, property owners must receive notice of the sale, the amounts owed, and the payment due date.443 In Maryland, the tax collector may withhold properties from auction if less than $250 is owed; in Baltimore, owner-occupied properties may not be sold for debts (including taxes, interest, and penalties) less than $750 (an increase from the previous allowed amount of $350).444 During the annual auctions, properties are sold to the highest good faith bidder.445 Those who bid—and win— on the lien certificates offered at auction earn the right to charge interest and fees to homeowners seeking to redeem their properties, as well as the right to foreclose.446 Following the auction, the jurisdiction must send notice to the homeowner within 60 days that a certificate for the property was sold and that the purchaser may foreclose on the property as early as six months from the date of sale (shortened to 60 days for properties needing substantial repairs).447 The homeowner can redeem the property following the tax sale but prior to foreclosure, provided they can pay the original lien amount, interest, and legal fees.448 If the owner does not pay all required amounts within two years, the lien holder can go to court to terminate the homeowner’s rights.449 The homeowner is not compensated for lost equity, and the foreclosure process extinguishes all other mortgages and liens on the property.450 However, if the lien holder paid more for the certificate than the taxes owed, state law provides for the excess amount to be conveyed to the owner if they lose their home through the tax sale process, called the “excess fund.”451 Owners are not notified these funds are available and many are not aware of it.452 38 Baltimore conducts its annual auction of liens each May.453 While Baltimore is now barred by state law from selling liens based only on water or sewer debt, discussed more below, unpaid water bills previously qualified a property for tax lien certificate sale in Baltimore.454 Until December 2017, the city was permitted to sell certificates for non-owner-occupied properties for as little as $350 in unpaid water and wastewater debt and $750 for owner-occupied properties that missed at least three quarters of payments.455 Before 2015, owner-occupied properties could also be sold for unpaid water bills as small as $350.456 In 1999, Baltimore reduced the maximum interest rate that lien holders could charge on overdue bills from 24 percent to 18 percent.457 On top of penalty interest rates, a lien holder could charge a 12 percent redemption interest rate for owner-occupied residences and 18 percent for non-owner-occupied properties.458 Additionally, between four and six months after a tax sale, a lien holder could add fees for a title search (around $350) and legal charges (typically around $1,500).459 (These practices are still in effect for other types of liens.) These additional charges made it impossible for many homeowners to redeem their homes after a lien certificate was sold at tax sale. And if a homeowner was unable to pay, the lien holder could initiate court proceedings to officially foreclose on the home and evict the owner. As reported by the Huffington Post Investigative Fund, one Baltimore resident was evicted from her home—which her family had owned for three decades—after a $362 unpaid water bill ballooned to $3,600 after interest, penalties, and fees were added to the redemption costs.460 Another East Baltimore resident lost her two properties to an investor after a $272.22 unpaid water bill grew to $6,414.69, nearly $5,000 of which was legal fees.461 In 2014, about 3,000 open tax foreclosure cases were pending in the local court system.462 Homeowners in Baltimore had been at risk of losing their properties for unpaid water bills for decades, but the steep increases in water rates and billing system issues made the practice more pervasive in recent years.463 In 2006, approximately one-third, or 750, of the 8,000 liens offered for sale had no property taxes, and about 10 percent were for debts under $500.464 In 2009, the city sold 666 tax liens based on unpaid water bills.465 In 2013, Baltimore sold 5,935 tax sale certificates, 523 (nine percent) of which were for water bills only.466 In May 2014, 671 homes were sold in 2014 for water liens only.467 In 2015, that number increased to 902.468 In 2016, Baltimore placed 9,984 properties in tax sale; 733 for water liens only.469 In 2017, Baltimore informed approximately 7,000 residents in arrears that their water debt would be sold at tax sale.470 The total amount of arrears for these customers was over $13 million.471 Over nine million of the debt was paid off prior to tax sale.472 Still, about 1,000 customers faced tax sale for unpaid water bills in 2017, and the city recovered approximately $6.4 million by selling water-only liens.473 Baltimore’s practice of placing water liens on homes and selling the liens to investors reportedly led to a significant loss of homeownership in a city with a predominantly Black population.474 The city attempted to justify the tax sale process by claiming that it was seeking new owners for its numerous abandoned or dilapidated properties.475 According to one investor, “the benefit of the system is that property can be put back in the hands of people who will put it back on the tax rolls and redevelop it.”476 However, most properties sold to investors were occupied.477 Investors also claimed that the practice relieved the government of the burden of collecting debts and managing long-neglected properties, entitling them to profit in exchange for taking on this risk.478 The Racial Impact of Baltimore’s Tax Sales Data from the Tax Sale Prevention Project, a joint effort of the Pro Bono Resource Center of Maryland and the Maryland Volunteer Lawyers Service, sheds some light on the demographics of Baltimore homeowners with water liens. The Project holds four Tax Sale Prevention Clinics in Baltimore each year, serving 120 clients in 2016 and 137 in 2017.479 Both years, the majority of the Project’s clients identified as Black (80 percent in 2016 and 73 percent in 2017) with a household income under $30,000 (67 percent in 2016 and 63 percent in 2017).480 In 2016, 78 percent of clients had delinquent water bills; the percentage rose to 86 percent in 2017.481 However, more analysis is needed to determine the full impact of Baltimore’s lien sales on Black residents, and the lasting effects of past water lien sales on the city, even though the practice has now ended. 39 Local Advocacy and Legislative Remedies Local advocates and lawmakers have expended great efforts in recent years to make water more affordable and manage the water lien crisis in Baltimore. The Baltimore Right to Water Coalition, which includes organizations such as the Maryland Volunteer Lawyers Service, the Pro Bono Resource Center of Maryland, Food & Water Watch, and the University of Baltimore School of Law, has been a key player in the fight for change in Baltimore’s water practices. Additionally, journalist Joan Jacobson published two critical studies related to water bills and liens in Baltimore that informed much of the research discussed above. Attempts to pass state and local legislation to manage the water crisis in Baltimore have had mixed results. In 2017, then-State Delegate Mary Washington, who represented north Baltimore, introduced two bills pertaining to water affordability and tax liens. House Bill 918 would have implemented statewide standards for water affordability programs, requiring utilities to adjust water bills for low-income households down to a level they could pay.482 House Bill 453 would have prohibited Baltimore from selling tax lien certificates solely to enforce a lien for unpaid water, sewer, or sanitary system charges.483 Neither bill passed. In February 2017, the Maryland legislature appointed a task force to examine tax lien sales and recommend statewide reforms.484 The task force met four times, including one public hearing, and a subgroup of the task force met once to discuss water liens.485 On January 18, 2018, the task force issued its report to the Maryland legislature.486 The report set forth recommendations and proposed legislation to address vacant and abandoned properties throughout the state and to add consumer and homeowner protections to the tax sale process.487 It also included specific recommendations related to water debt, proposing that jurisdictions implement water affordability programs and encourage payment plans.488 The task force also recommended that the state engage in an examination of its drinking water infrastructure.489 In December 2017, former Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh ordered a moratorium on the sale of water liens on owner-occupied residential properties.490 The moratorium did not extend to commercial or rental properties.491 Given the limitations of the moratorium, Delegate Washington introduced a bill to revoke the City Council’s authority to use liens to collect debt from unpaid water bills.492 The bill passed the House but was not voted on by the Senate.493 Instead, in the final 90 minutes of the legislative session in April 2018, the Senate passed a bill to extend the mayor’s moratorium through 2019, extending the ban to include all residential (owned and rented) properties with only water and sewer debt.494 However, properties with multiple types of liens (for example, water plus property tax debt) were still subject to tax sale. Maryland’s Department of Legislative Services prepared a financial assessment suggesting that Baltimore’s revenue losses because of the law could be “significant.”495 More recently, strides have been made at the state and city level in the fight to make Baltimore’s water affordable for its residents. In December 2018, City Council President Young introduced the “Water Accountability and Equity Act,” which would provide for income-based billing for impoverished residents and other customer protections.496 Under the proposed law, city residents earning less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level would be provided with credits for their water bills.497 The city’s ability to shut off residents’ water service for nonpayment would also be restricted.498 The proposed law would create an Office of Water-Customer Advocacy and Appeals, which would serve as a neutral intermediary between residents and DPW to promote fairness to customers dealing with water billing disputes.499 Operating independently of DPW but with its cooperation, the office would: (1) serve as a customer advocate by conducting investigations into disputes, connecting customers to social services, and adjusting bills; and (2) conduct appeals hearings at the request of customers after a problem-solving determination is made.500 The bill specifies certain due process protections for customers at hearings, including the right to self-representation or representation by an attorney, to present evidence, to submit evidence in rebuttal, and to conduct cross examination.501 It also authorizes a customer or other party aggrieved by a final decision to seek judicial review of that decision.502 The first public hearing was held on the bill in May 2019.503 Separately, in January 2019, now-State Senator Mary Washington and other lawmakers introduced Senate Bill 96 in the Maryland General Assembly.504 The bill proposed to permanently ban Baltimore from placing liens on homes and churches for unpaid water bills.505 In January 2019, LDF submitted written testimony in support of the bill.506 On April 3, 2019, the General Assembly unanimously passed the bill, and Governor Larry Hogan has signed it into law.507 40 Cleveland, Ohio Water and Wastewater Bills in Cleveland Water bills in Cleveland, which are controlled by the city’s Division of Water, include fixed and consumption charges.508 The fixed charge, which totals nine dollars a month for the typical residential customer, is based on the water meter size.509 The consumption charge is determined by the distance and elevation of the customer’s address from Lake Erie.510 In 2019, a home in the city of Cleveland that uses approximately 1,500 gallons of water a month is charged $20.57, with additional usage resulting in a charge of $34.97 per 7,480 gallons of water (prorated to the customer’s actual usage).511 Rates increase in the outlying suburbs.512 Cleveland transitioned from quarterly to monthly billing in January 2017.513 Between 1993 and 2015, water rates in Cleveland increased by an average of seven percent per year, with a significant increase between 2011 and 2015.514 According to one study, rates more than doubled between 2010 and 2017, from an annual average of $630.41 to $1,249.29 for a family of four.515 The city did not raise rates between 2016 and 2018 (although some customers apparently dispute this, as shown by comments on a Cleveland Water blog post).516 Rates are expected to increase by $16 to $32 per year for the average residential customer in 2019 and 2020.517 Sewer rates in Cleveland are controlled by the Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District.518 Sewer charges are calculated by multiplying a household’s water consumption by the sewer rate, plus a base charge.519 In 2019, the base charge is $6.35, and the sewer rate is $94.15 for every 7,480 gallons of water.520 Sewer rates increased 13 percent per year between 2012 and 2016.521 In 2016, another 41 percent rate increase was approved through 2021.522 Accordingly, the base rate will rise to $7.95 in 2020 and $9.70 in 2021.523 The sewer rate will increase to $100.15 in 2020 and $106.50 in 2021.524 While Ohio’s water and wastewater infrastructure needs are expected to total $20 billion over the next 20 years,525 Cleveland has already made significant upgrades to its infrastructure.526 Even so, the city is expected to invest more than $235 million in the next several years to upgrade its underground water mains, and the sewer rate increases are intended to fund additional infrastructure projects.527 As in other areas, residents of Cleveland are concerned about water affordability. In the 2019 study by APM Reports, Great Lakes Today, and NPR, researchers found that Cleveland’s water and sewer rates were higher than the rates charged in Chicago, Milwaukee, Detroit, Buffalo, and Duluth.528 In May 2018, local community members spoke directly to the Sewer District and Cleveland Water about the need for water affordability at a roundtable event organized by the Alliance for the Great Lakes and supported by U.S. Congresswoman Marcia L. Fudge and other organizations.529 Cleveland Water has two water affordability programs. Under the Homestead Discount program, which is for low-income seniors who own and reside in their homes, residents pay only $5.65 toward the monthly fixed fee and $13.37 for monthly consumption, regardless of the amount of water used.530 In 2020, these rates will increase to $5.80 and $14.20, respectively.531 Cleveland also has an Affordability Program for any low-income resident who owns and lives in their home.532 Under the program, residents receive a 40 percent discount on their water bill.533 For a family of four, total household income must be at or below $50,200 in order to qualify for the program.534 The Sewer District also has Affordability and Homestead programs for low-income homeowners.535 41 Certain residents of Cleveland can contest their water bills through a hearing with the Water Review Board, which was created by the consent decree in Colegrove v. City of Cleveland, a class action filed in 1974.536 Pursuant to the decree, the city has the duty and responsibility to provide water and sewer customers with notice and an opportunity to be heard prior to a service disconnection.537 The Water Review Board is intended to provide a neutral forum to settle disputes prior to disconnecting a customer’s water service.538 It may reduce amounts owed by a customer to Cleveland Water and defer the payment of amounts owed.539 To be eligible for a hearing, (1) the property must be residential; (2) the person requesting the hearing must be the owner or a resident with an approved Cleveland Water Tenant Deposit Agreement;540 (3) proof of residency must be submitted; (4) the requestor must have received a shutoff or termination notice; and (5) the hearing must be requested within 10 days of receipt of the notice.541 Residents of multi-family dwellings with more than four units, such as apartment buildings, are not eligible for a hearing. The Water Review Board is staffed by Cleveland Public Utilities employees who are not affiliated with the water department’s customer service, billings, or collections units.542 According to local advocates, Cleveland Water has represented that its customer service representatives do not verbally notify customers about the availability of Water Review Board hearings. Unlike other major utilities that are subject to regulation by the Ohio Public Utilities Commission, Cleveland Water is unregulated and reports only to a city council committee.543 Water Department Issues Cleveland’s News 5 investigative team, led by Chief Investigative Reporter Ron Regan, has been instrumental in uncovering a series of issues with the city’s water department over the last decade. In 2008, the news team revealed that 35,000 water meters were broken, producing inaccurate bills.544 In 2010, they determined that the average customer service wait time was 35 minutes, and two years later, that Cleveland Water had failed to collect $40 million in revenue.545 Cleveland Water’s problems continued in 2013, when customers complained of billing glitches from newly-installed wireless smart meters.546 In 2017, the news team determined that nearly 400,000 smart meters were incorrectly installed, which could lead to inaccurate bills.547 In a report by the subcontractor that Cleveland hired to install its meters, Itron, the company warned that “many errors can occur during installation that can cause an inaccurate meter read.”548 Between 2013 and 2017, Cleveland replaced nearly 3,500 malfunctioning meters.549 In 2016, Mr. Regan and his team found that customer complaints and overbilling were a massive problem in Cleveland.550 Approximately 16,000 water customers complained of overbilling in 2015 alone.551 While Cleveland Water claimed that some of the high bills were due to leaks, customers that spoke with the news team insisted there were no leaks—and some hired plumbers to ensure there were none.552 Those residents also complained that Cleveland Water’s customer service team frequently hangs up on callers and exhibits rude behavior.553 The news team obtained disciplinary records for the customer service department and found that one of every three representatives violated water department policies.554 Cleveland Water received more than 72,000 water customer billing complaints between 2013 and 2017.555 42 Water Problems in Cleveland Cleveland’s water billing and dispute resolution issues are exemplified by one resident’s story. Karen lives in a majority-Black suburb of Cleveland serviced by the Cleveland Division of Water. Karen normally uses less than 500 cubic feet of water per quarter, and her monthly water bill normally runs around $40. But, in the spring of 2014, Karen received an unexpectedly large bill. Cleveland Water claimed that she used approximately 14,000 cubic feet of water—enough to fill several swimming pools—and charged her nearly $1,800. Karen called Cleveland Water to dispute her bill, but she was told that she must have a leak and that she had to pay the bill. Cleveland Water did not tell her there was a formal process for disputing bills: the Water Review Board Hearing process. Instead, she learned about the board from an acquaintance. She called back to request a hearing and was told to wait until she received a shutoff notice. While Karen waited for her shutoff notice, she hired a plumber, at her own expense of $285, to inspect her property. The plumber found no leaks. This wasn’t surprising: the amount of water Karen was alleged to have used was almost a physical impossibility. It would have submerged every square foot of her home in water more than 13-feet deep. Karen thought this was obviously a billing error and it would be corrected by the Water Review Board. When Karen got her shutoff notice, she requested a board hearing and was given a date. She arrived on her appointed date, with a certification from the plumber in hand, and was told there was no hearing that day. She showed the Cleveland Water staff her paperwork and, apparently realizing their mistake, they gathered the Water Review Board for a hearing. Despite the factors on Karen’s side—her plumber’s certification, her consistent water use before and after the billing period in question, and the physical implausibility of the claimed use—the Water Review Board refused to budge. The board’s only concession was a payment plan to settle her inflated bill over time.  Karen made payments over the following year, eventually paying off the balance. This was a challenge for Karen given her income: at the time she received veteran disability benefits and worked part-time while attending school. Cleveland Water’s obviously erroneous billing, followed by its stubborn refusal to acknowledge its error, typifies many people’s experience with these grievance processes. Image: The Hope Memorial Bridge in Cleveland, Ohio. 43 Water shutoffs and liens are also a pervasive problem in Cleveland. In 2015, 44,000 shutoff notices were sent out to Cleveland Water customers for failure to pay their bills.556 While many customers settle their accounts after receiving a notice, Cleveland Water regularly disconnects service to delinquent customers. Indeed, the 2019 report by APM Reports, Great Lakes Today, and NPR found that there were more than 40,000 water shutoffs in Cleveland between 2010 and 2017.557 Cleveland Water has told local advocates that it determines where to disconnect service based on geographic zone and account balance amounts. The department reportedly rotates through zones, turning off service to accounts with either high or low overdue balances if in the same area. Thousands of water liens are placed on homes in Cleveland each year. According to data received by the news team, close to 8,000 tax liens were filed by Cleveland Water with the Cuyahoga County Auditor from 2013 to 2015, and nearly half of them (3,651) were filed in 2015 alone.558 Cleveland Water reported slightly different (but very similar) lien numbers for the period between 2012 and 2016. According to the department, it placed liens on 1,136 properties in 2012 and 1,742 in 2013.559 The number of liens increased greatly in subsequent years: Cleveland Water reported 2,847 liens in 2014; 2,872 in 2015; and 4,442 in 2016.560 All told, between 2012 and 2016, the department placed liens on just over 13,000 properties.561 (Separately, LDF received publicly-available data from Cuyahoga County indicating that more than 11,000 water liens were placed on properties between 2014 and 2018.) Cleveland Water further claims that it recovered $8.5 million through the water lien process between 2012 and 2016, representing just 0.59 percent of its operating revenue.562 According to the news team, Cleveland Water customers are typically not told of their right to a hearing before the Water Review Board, and few hearings are held each year.563 They determined that, in 2015, the board held only 31 hearings despite thousands of customer complaints.564 And when hearings are held, serious issues have been uncovered, including malfunctioning meters, incorrect meter readings, and improperly-prepared bills.565 Through a public records request, LDF independently confirmed that Water Review Board hearings are rarely held. Between 2013 and 2018, only a few dozen hearings were held each year, with the highest number of hearings in 2017. The table below shows the number of hearings requested and held each year for the last six years. Table 2: Cleveland Water Review Board Hearings Requested and Held, 2013-2018 Year 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Hearings Requested 276 111 81 106 274 207 Hearings Held 43 30 29 32 69 33 According to Cleveland Water, many issues prompting hearing requests are resolved prior to a hearing. Still, many customers who request a hearing do not receive one, according to the department’s own records. The figure below reflects hearing request outcomes between 2013 and 2018, including resolved requests, hearings held, and unresolved requests. Of course, this data does not capture the number of hearing requests that are never made because customers are not aware of, or are not informed of, their right to do so. 44 Figure 1: Water Review Board Hearing Request Outcomes, 2013-2018 Further, those who do receive a hearing are not guaranteed a bill adjustment or even a payment plan. The figures below provide a breakdown of Water Review Board hearing resolutions between 2013 and 2018. Figure 2: Water Review Board Hearing Resolutions, 2013 45 Figure 3: Water Review Board Hearing Resolutions, 2014 Figure 4: Water Review Board Hearing Resolutions, 2015 46 Figure 5: Water Review Board Hearing Resolutions, 2016 Figure 6: Water Review Board Hearing Resolutions, 2017 47 Figure 7: Water Review Board Hearing Resolutions, 2018 2018 Resolutions I Adiustment Only I Payment Plan Only Adiustment and Payment Plan I No Adjustment or Payment Plan Water Liens in Ohio Ohio residents who fail to pay their water or sewer bills may have their service disconnected or have a lien placed on their homes for the amounts due.566 Twice a year, in September and March, Cleveland Water has the ability to place liens on homes for outstanding debt in the county where water service is provided.567 While there does not appear to be any statutory minimum amount of arrears required for this process to be initiated, Cleveland Water has informed local advocates that it requires the customer to have at least $300 in arrears over a six-month period and to be disconnected from service. If the homeowner pays the amount due, the lien is immediately released.568 In Ohio, the county treasurer can initiate a foreclosure action against a homeowner when taxes or charges like water and sewer debt are overdue.569 If the court enters a foreclosure judgment, the home is sold at auction to satisfy the debt.570 Prior to the sale, notice must be published in a newspaper once a week for three weeks.571 The winning bid at the auction receives a deed to the home.572 The homeowner may redeem their property prior to the court confirming the sale by paying the overdue amounts, assessments, penalties, interest, fees, and court costs.573 Alternatively, the county treasurer can sell a lien on a home at auction.574 Notice must be provided to the homeowner by certified mail at least 30 days before the sale and be published in a newspaper.575 At the auction, the lien certificate is awarded to the bidder with the lowest rate of interest on the debt.576 Following the sale, the purchaser becomes the owner of the lien. Following the lien sale, the homeowner has one year to redeem the property by paying the debt, as well as up to 18 percent interest, attorneys’ fees, and other penalties.577 If the homeowner fails to redeem the property during this period, the lien purchaser can file a lawsuit to foreclose on the property.578 Once the foreclosure is finalized, the homeowner loses ownership of the home.579 However, after the lien purchaser is compensated for the original lien amount, interest, attorneys’ fees, and other charges and penalties, any excess funds from the sale of the home must be transferred to the original owner, provided the owner knows to request such funds.580 After three years, any unclaimed funds revert to the county.581 Cleveland and Cuyahoga County have seen a significant shift in the enforcement of liens through foreclosure over the past five years. According to publicly-available data from the Cuyahoga County court system, there were 1,559 tax foreclosure cases filed in 2014. Of these, 574 (37 percent) were filed by the county directly, and 985 (63 percent) were filed by private lien purchasers. By contrast, in 2018, there were 2,210 tax foreclosure cases filed. Of these, 2,034 (92 percent) were filed by the county, and only 176 (eight percent) were filed by private lien purchasers. The figure below reflects tax foreclosures filed by the county and by private lien purchasers between 2014 and 2018. Foreclosures filed directly by the county are designated as “Tax Foreclosures” and those filed by private lien purchasers are called “Tax Certificate Foreclosures.” Note that this data includes all tax foreclosures, including but not limited to those based on water liens. 49 Figure 8: Tax Foreclosures in Cuyahoga County by Type, 2014 to 2018 Water Affordability and Race in Cleveland As of July 2017, the population of Cuyahoga County was approximately 1.3 million.582 Approximately 30.5 percent of the county’s population is Black; nearly 60 percent is white; and close to six percent is Latinx.583 In 2017, the population of the city of Cleveland was 385,525.584 Approximately 51 percent of Cleveland’s population is Black; 34 percent is white; 11 percent is Latinx.585 Thirty-six percent of the city’s residents are impoverished; 18.3 percent of the county’s population lives in poverty.586 LDF examined water liens and shutoffs in Cuyahoga County to determine if the county’s Black population is disparately impacted by these practices.587 First, LDF analyzed water liens in the county from 2014 to 2018. The maps below demonstrate that water liens have been heavily concentrated in majority-Black census tracts in the county overall, including Cleveland. In 2014, 66.5 percent of water liens were located in majority-Black census tracts. That year, only 20.2 percent of liens were located in majority-white tracts.588 In 2015, 68.9 percent of water liens were located in majority-Black tracts and about 18 percent were located in majority-white tracts. In 2016, 52.9 percent of liens were located in majority-Black tracts and 23.3 percent were located in majority-white tracts. In 2017 and 2018, the percentages spiked again—in 2017, 68.9 percent were located in majority-Black tracts, with a slight decrease to 66.3 percent in 2018. In those years, only 18 percent and 21.5 percent of liens were located in majority-white tracts, respectively. The distribution of water liens for each year between 2014 and 2018 is shown in the maps below. 50 51 Map 3: Water Liens in Cuyahoga County, 2014 Cuyahoga County Water Notices and Black by Tract ?Cansus Tracts Any Part Black - 2010 Census Eta-59m 5% 599m 20% to 46% -4:m to 66% -au% to 30% -B?%tn 190% 2 4 a Hilas Grgengots sent water notices 2014 5 2 43 1? 42 91 Map 4: Water Liens in Cuyahoga County, 2015 Guyahnga County Water Notices and Black by Tract :Census Tracts 924; Any Part Black 2010 Census In 5% 45% lo 20% -2D%to ma -d?%ta 60% -so% to soar. -an%tu 1mm 0 2 Hilaa Green dots watar notice-.5 -- 2015 52 53 Map 5: Water Liens in Cuyahoga County, 2016 Cuyahoga County Water Notices and at, Black by Tract :ICansua Tracts Any Part Black 2010 Census 3mm 5% :93me 20% -20% to 40% -40% lo 60% -am In 80% -30%to 100% 2? 4 6 "Has Graze dots re resent water notices 2016 [31/ 20 Map 6: Water Liens in Cuyahoga County, 2017 myahoga County Water Notices and Black by Tract Census Tracts Any Part Black 2010' Census Grier! dots re resent water notices .. 201? 2 a EA 8? 54 Map 7: Water Liens in Cuyahoga County, 2018 LDF also examined water shutoff notices in 2015. Of the 41,970 notices issued in Cuyahoga County, 18,701 (44.6 percent) were in majority-Black census blocks and 18,570 (44.2 percent) were in majority-Black census tracts. About 78 percent of the county’s Black population lives in a census block with one or more water notices, compared to 72 percent of the overall population and 69 percent of the white population. Given that shutoff notices are far more common than water liens, it is unsurprising that the racial impact is not as stark. 55 Map 8: Water Shutoff Notices in Cuyahoga County, 2015 So how can advocates tackle these issues of water affordability? Part III of this report describes potential litigation and policy solutions to address water issues in these cities and beyond. 56 beyond affordability: access to water infrastructure and contamination While this report is primarily focused on affordability, it is scarcely the only water-related issue impacting communities of color today. Black communities also suffer from a lack of access to water infrastructure and water contamination. These issues often overlap with affordability concerns. Lack of access to water or sewer infrastructure typically means that a household must rely on a private system, like a well or septic tank, which can be costly and can increase the risk of contamination. Similarly, water rates can skyrocket to fund necessary improvements to repair infrastructure or remedy contamination, and a community may be at risk of contamination if the municipality delays infrastructure improvements due to financial concerns. These issues are described in more detail below. Access to Water Infrastructure Many communities within the United States do not have full access to water or sewer systems. As of 2013, between 600,000 and one million U.S. households lacked some or all plumbing facilities.589 More than 100,000 households lacked hot running water and 93,000 households lacked flush toilets.590 Eighteen percent of households are not connected to public sewers and use individual systems like septic tanks.591 The lack of water and sewer infrastructure heightens the risk of waterborne disease and contamination.592 While it is difficult to measure racial disparities in access to water systems due to enforcement failures and data gaps,593 Black communities, particularly small towns in the South, are more likely to lack access to basic water and sewer infrastructure.594 At least one study has established that Black people are twice as likely as whites to live without modern plumbing.595 The lack of proper sanitation infrastructure is a particularly pervasive problem in Alabama, which is close to 30 percent Black.596 While current data is unavailable, in 2002, the EPA noted that 40 to 90 percent of households in the state had no septic system or were using an inadequate one.597 A 2013 study determined that close to 20 percent of households in Alabama’s Black Belt had no means of wastewater disposal, and another found that up to 90 percent of sanitation systems in the region were failing.598 In Lowndes County, Alabama, which is situated between Selma and Montgomery and where more than 70 percent of the population is Black, more than 80 percent of the community has no connection to the municipal sewer system.599 Several obstacles play a role in the county’s lack of sanitary infrastructure, including entrenched poverty (the median household income in the county was below $26,000 in 2015, and private septic systems can cost up to $30,000) and poor soil conditions.600 As an alternative to sanitary infrastructure, many homes simply have straight PVC pipes that carry waste into open pits and trenches that overflow when it storms.601 57 Consequences can arise from the county’s lack of sanitation infrastructure. Alabama law makes it a misdemeanor “to build, maintain, or use an insanitary sewage collection, treatment, and disposal facility or one that is or is likely to become a menace to the public health.”602 This includes private plumbing facilities or disposal systems, and failure to comply with the law can result in fines or arrest.603 Between 1999 and 2002, the state issued a number of arrest warrants to county residents for failing to install proper sanitation infrastructure.604 There are also health impacts. In 2017, approximately 35 percent of adults surveyed tested positive for hookworm, which can cause intestinal illness and developmental delays in children.605 Catherine Coleman Flowers, who coined the term “America’s dirty secret” to refer to the lack of sanitation in Alabama’s Black Belt and has advocated for proper sanitation in Lowndes County, believes that racial discrimination explains the infrastructure disparities.606 She notes that the areas of Alabama that have historically had wastewater treatment were inhabited largely by white populations, to the exclusion of Black communities.607 Other communities of color are similarly affected by the lack of water infrastructure. For example, the predominantly Latinx residents of the small, unincorporated settlements along the U.S.-Mexico border, known as colonias, as well as American Indian and Alaskan Native communities, are less likely than white communities to have access to basic water and sewer infrastructure.608 And a September 2018 survey by The Washington Post found that, one year after Hurricane Maria, Puerto Rico was still plagued by sporadic water access and 50 percent of residents did not have enough water to drink.609 One common way that local governments exclude communities of color from the provision of water and sewer services, particularly in the South, is by declining to include them in the town’s official boundaries, known as “underbounding.”610 Several studies have documented that, following the Civil War, Black families that remained in the South often settled in rural pockets in the outer bounds of municipal areas.611 Over time, once residential segregation was firmly entrenched in a particular town, municipalities would selectively annex white neighborhoods into the town’s official boundaries, ignoring Black neighborhoods.612 Underbounding ensured that the excluded Black neighborhoods received fewer services, including reduced access to water and sewer, and had limited or no political voice in the community.613 Not surprisingly, several studies link underbounding to the vestiges of Jim Crow and suggest that it evinces discriminatory intent on the part of local officials to exclude Black residents from essential services.614 For example, in 2018, two researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill assessed the relationship between race and access to water and sewer services in areas bordering municipalities in 75 North Carolina counties.615 Despite their close proximity to local utilities, these communities have been historically excluded from municipal water and sewer services and have been forced to use septic tanks and wells, increasing their risk of contamination and disease.616 The researchers determined that the two most unserved groups throughout the counties were lower-income Black populations that had been excluded from municipal services on the basis of race during the era of legal racial segregation, and higher-income non-Black populations that could better afford and properly maintain private wells and septic systems.617 Contamination Drinking water contamination also remains an issue throughout the United States. In 2017, the National Resources Defense Council released a report finding that nearly 77 million Americans lived in places where water systems were in some violation of safety regulations, including the Safe Drinking Water Act.618 These violations included exceeding health-based standards, failing to properly test water for contaminants, and failing to report contamination to state authorities or the public.619 Between 2004 and 2009, close to 50 million people were served by water systems that had contaminants exceeding federal guidelines.620 Contaminated drinking water is estimated to cause more than 16 million gastrointestinal illnesses each year, although the health impacts are difficult to measure.621 58 Lead contamination of drinking water is particularly pervasive and problematic. Lead pipes were often used in the construction of drinking water service lines in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, because of lead’s malleability and ease of use.622 Lead has been banned from plumbing materials since 1968, but can still be found in older infrastructure—in fact, approximately seven percent of the U.S. population is served by utilities that have full or partial lead service lines.623 Lead can cause neurological damage, renal disease, cardiovascular effects, and reproductive toxicity.624 Lead exposure impacts children more than adults, given their smaller body volumes, and can permanently impact brain function and development.625 Studies have shown that with each microgram per deciliter increase in blood lead level, children perform worse on intelligence tests.626 Communities of color are often the most impacted from drinking water contamination.627 In 2017, researchers from Florida Atlantic University and Texas A&M University released a study finding that low-income Black and Latinx communities were more likely to have Safe Drinking Water Act violations than other communities (including Black communities with average incomes).628 The lack of demographic data from community water systems has precluded a comprehensive study on the extent of contamination on communities of color.629 However, it is well established that lead contamination disproportionately impacts Black communities, and in particular, children. Black children are three times more likely than white children to have elevated blood lead levels.630 While lead contamination can come from other sources, water can be the primary source of exposure.631 In Milwaukee, which is 40 percent Black and highly segregated by race, more than 11 percent of children tested positive for elevated lead levels in 2016.632 While the city has repeatedly emphasized that lead from paint is the most pressing concern, many residents believe that lead is being leached into their water from service lines.633 And in August 2018, drinking water was disconnected in all Detroit public schools after elevated levels of lead and copper were found in 16 of 24 schools tested.634 As an alternative, the school district provided water coolers and bottled water to students.635 In 2016, the governor of Louisiana declared a public health emergency in St. Joseph, a majority-Black community, after lead and copper were found in the town’s drinking water supply.636 While St. Joseph’s residents had complained for more than a decade that their tap water was brown or yellow, no improvements were made to the water system until elevated lead levels were found at City Hall and in a private home.637 By the end of 2017, the town’s water system had been entirely replaced—and the costs were expected to fall on residents, 40 percent of whom live under the federal poverty line.638 Water rates in St. Joseph are expected to increase by 45 percent in order to maintain the new system.639 Of course, Flint, Michigan is the most infamous example of water contamination in recent years. Flint is 54 percent Black and 42 percent of residents are impoverished.640 In April 2014, while the city was under emergency management due to financial distress, it switched its public water source from Lake Huron to the Flint River, but failed to add corrosion-control chemicals to the water, which caused lead to leach from older pipes.641 Residents complained about the odor, taste, and appearance of the Flint River water almost immediately, and E. Coli bacteria was found in the drinking water supply just four months after the switch.642 In 2015, reports emerged regarding the levels of lead in Flint’s water, which was so significant that residents could not drink or bathe in water from their taps.643 At its peak, the highest lead level recorded in Flint was 13,000 parts per billion, more than 866 times the allowable upper level.644 Many were hospitalized due to illnesses from consuming the contaminated water. For example, between June 2014 and March 2015, there was an outbreak of infections caused by Legionella bacteria in Genesee County (where Flint is located), with multiple deaths reported.645 At least half the cases were traced to the Flint water supply.646 By October 2015, the city had reverted back to water supplied by the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department, the entity that had provided Flint’s water since 1967.647 59 When then-Michigan Governor Rick Snyder was asked if race was a factor in how the Flint crisis unfolded, he gave a non-answer: “I don’t know if you can conclude that it was a racial issue by any means, but I don’t know.”648 But the Flint Water Advisory Task Force was more definitive, issuing a report stating that the facts led them to “the inescapable conclusion that this is a case of environmental injustice.”649 Unsurprisingly, Flint’s crisis resulted in criminal charges and multiple civil lawsuits, which are pending in at least seven different state and federal courts in Michigan.650 In two cases, Boler v. Early and Mays v. Snyder, plaintiffs alleged that their constitutional rights to substantive due process and equal protection had been violated by the governor and other state actors.651 With respect to substantive due process, they alleged that the government violated plaintiffs’ fundamental rights to bodily integrity and protection from state-created danger, as well as their right to protection from government conduct that shocks the conscience.652 Plaintiffs also alleged that the harm to Flint residents was based on their race and poverty, violating their constitutional right to equal protection.653 While state officials vigorously defended against these claims, one key point was uncontested: “No one disputes that the Flint drinking water situation has detrimentally affected Flint residents, businesses, and public entities, and sparked significant health and safety concerns.”654 The district court in Boler found that plaintiffs’ claims were preempted by the Safe Drinking Water Act, and both cases were dismissed.655 On appeal, the cases were consolidated, and the Sixth Circuit reversed, finding no preemption under the federal law.656 The consolidated case (which now includes a total of eight cases) continues to be litigated.657 On August 1, 2018, the district court dismissed the State of Michigan and former Governor Snyder from the case, but kept the city of Flint and other state officials as defendants.658 In a separate litigation, also alleging that state and city officials violated residents’ substantive due process right to bodily integrity, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals recently determined that plaintiffs made a plausible substantive due process argument, analogizing the water crisis to government experiments on unknowing and unwilling patients.659 Flint continues to struggle to recover from its water crisis. Water lead levels have improved, but the city is still behind in replacing lead service lines. As of December 2018, only 7,000 out of 18,300 lead or galvanized steel water lines had been replaced, and the work was expected to last through the end of 2019.660 Flint’s corrosive water also impacted other home appliances, such as washing machines, dishwashers, and hot water heaters.661 And while Flint continues to distribute free filters, many residents do not know how to use them or have understandable mistrust of even filtered tap water, requiring them to resort to expensive purified bottled water (Michigan stopped providing free bottled water to Flint in April 2018).662 The fallout from Flint’s water crisis is expected to last for generations.663 60 part III: water and change Water is not just any utility, it’s something that everyone needs … it’s a human right. Losing your home for an unpaid water bill is unconscionable. –Senator Mary Washington, Maryland General Assembly (2019)664 There is no global water crisis, because all water problems are local, or regional, and their solutions must be local and regional. There is no global water crisis, there are a thousand water crises, each distinct. –Charles Fishman, The Big Thirst: The Secret Life and Turbulent Future of Water (2012)665 61 Water affordability is complicated. Cities need funds to pay for infrastructure upgrades, and water bills may not bring in enough revenue to support these efforts. But many cities have been overly aggressive with collection tactics, punishing their customers for their inability to pay their bills by shutting off their water and taking their homes. In many instances, these cities may be improperly billing their customers or providing insufficient means to dispute a bill. As shown by the city studies of Baltimore and Cleveland, and the lessons learned in Detroit and Flint, these practices are likely to have a disproportionate impact on Black people. Part III of this report outlines potential litigation strategies and policy solutions to address the problem of water unaffordability in communities of color across the United States. 62 Litigating Water Affordability Water equality advocates should consider litigation to challenge municipalities’ discriminatory water practices. Although there is a wide range of plausible claims, below is a brief analysis of a potential procedural or substantive due process claim under the 14th Amendment and a summary of other possible causes of action that advocates should consider. In particular, potential plaintiffs should consider bringing a claim under the Fair Housing Act (FHA) to challenge water lien sales and shutoffs that have a disparate impact on Black communities.666 The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides that a state may not “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”667 Due process claims can be procedural (addressing the right to notice and a hearing before a deprivation) or substantive (deprivations of life, liberty, or property arising from governmental actions). The 14th Amendment does not include a private right of action, but a plaintiff can file a procedural or substantive due process claim against a local government under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (Section 1983), a civil rights law that can remedy deprivations of constitutional rights.668 Procedural Due Process As discussed above, municipalities may be providing insufficient means for customers to dispute their bills prior to taking action against them for arrears, including water service shutoffs or water liens. As several scholars have noted, including Professors Sharmila Murthy and Martha F. Davis, advocates could pursue a procedural due process claim to address this issue.669 Procedural due process claims examine whether there is a life, liberty, or property interest that the state has interfered with and whether the government has followed adequate procedures in depriving claimants of their interest.670 In determining whether a plaintiff has a property interest, courts look to independent sources such as state law.671 For example, a state law requiring a local government to provide residents with certain municipal services and permitting residents to seek remedies for the unlawful denial of these services has been found to create a protected property interest for procedural due process purposes.672 If a court determines that the plaintiff has an interest protected by procedural due process, it evaluates whether the available procedural safeguards are constitutionally adequate.673 Due process requires, at a minimum, that parties whose rights are to be affected are entitled to be notified of the proposed action and to be heard.674 The right to notice and the opportunity to be heard must be granted at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.675 When evaluating procedural due process claims challenging the adequacy of notice, courts determine whether the plaintiff was given “notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the [proceeding] and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.”676 Notice must be designed to inform the customer of the proposed disconnection and the reason for it; it must be given sufficiently in advance to permit them adequate opportunity to prepare for and be present at the hearing.677 Procedural due process claims involving the opportunity to be heard are generally evaluated under the threepart test established by the Supreme Court in Mathews v. Elridge.678 Under that test, courts consider (1) the private interest that will be affected by the official action; (2) the risk of erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute safeguards; and (3) the government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.679 As described below, such claims may be used to challenge water shutoffs without adequate notice and procedures for appeal. Substantive Due Process Substantive due process ensures that governmental deprivations of life, liberty, or property are subject to limitations regardless of the adequacy or fairness of the procedures employed.680 It protects a range of fundamental rights “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition,”681 including the specific freedoms enumerated in 63 the Bill of Rights, as well the rights to marry,682 to have children,683 to marital privacy,684 to use contraception,685 to bodily integrity,686 and to refuse medical treatment.687 When these fundamental rights are implicated, courts engage in an elevated scrutiny of the governmental action at issue.688 Substantive due process also extends to government conduct that is outrageous and “shocks the conscience.”689 As noted by Professor Toni Massaro and attorney Ellen Elizabeth Brooks, the shocks the conscience test empowers a court to hold government officials accountable for outrageous conduct even if it is unwilling to declare that the liberty at stake is a fundamental right.690 Even so, this test is rarely used and is highly deferential to government action.691 The Supreme Court has generally been reluctant to expand substantive due process to new areas.692 For example, the Court has refused to constitutionalize affirmative rights to basic human needs such as food, medical care, and housing, and attempts to expand substantive due process to include a right to basic services have generally been rejected.693 Still, scholars have advocated for the recognition of a substantive due process right to affordable water, and this issue was raised in litigation challenging the Detroit water shutoffs, as described below.694 Due Process Claims for Water Service Shutoffs In Memphis Light, Gas, and Water Division v. Craft, the Supreme Court held that water services provided by public utilities are considered property interests for procedural due process purposes.695 In Memphis Light, the Crafts, a couple in Tennessee, received two sets of bills for their monthly electric, gas, and water fees, due to an issue with their meters when they first moved to their home.696 Although the Crafts sought to determine the cause of the double billing, their service was repeatedly cut off for nonpayment.697 Each bill they received contained a “final notice,” stating that payment was overdue and service would be discontinued if payment was not made by a certain date.698 The utility also included a flyer with the final notice—some customers received information about credit counseling stations that could assist them, and others advised the customers to bring their bills to an office or call in the event of a billing dispute or need for a payment plan.699 It was unclear which flyer the Crafts received, but they were not informed of the availability of a mechanism to discuss their dispute with the utility’s management.700 Eventually, the Crafts filed a class action lawsuit under Section 1983 for termination of utility service without due process of law.701 The district court declined to certify a class action and determined that the Crafts did not have a property interest in continued utility service while a disputed bill remained unpaid.702 It went on to acknowledge that the plaintiffs had not been given adequate notice of a procedure for resolving disputed bills, but found that they had not been deprived of due process.703 The Sixth Circuit affirmed the denial of class certification, but held that the utility’s procedures did not comport with procedural due process.704 The Supreme Court granted review to determine whether a utility’s termination of service for nonpayment deprives a customer of “property” within the meaning of the Due Process Clause and whether the utility’s procedures afforded the Crafts due process.705 First, the Court determined that Tennessee law created a property interest in continued utility service within the scope of the Due Process Clause, as a state statute barred a utility from disconnecting service except for nonpayment of bills.706 The fact that continued service was conditioned on the payment of charges properly owed did not affect the Crafts’ interest, because “the Fourteenth Amendment’s protection of property has never been interpreted to safeguard only the rights of undisputed ownership.”707 After determining that a legitimate property interest was at issue, the Court evaluated whether the Crafts had been deprived of their constitutional right to due process. First, the Court noted that due process requires “notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.”708 The utility’s notification procedure did not inform the Crafts of the availability of an opportunity to present an objection and thus they were deprived of proper notice within the scope of the Due Process Clause.709 64 The Court further determined that, given the importance of utility service, the Crafts should have been afforded “some kind of hearing” prior to the shutoff.710 In the Court’s view, “[u]tility service is a necessity of modern life; indeed, the discontinuance of water or heating for even short periods of time may threaten health and safety.”711 Accordingly, even if service may be ultimately restored, “the cessation of essential services for any appreciable time works a uniquely final deprivation.”712 Because the utility failed to afford the Crafts an opportunity to present their complaint to a designated employee empowered to review disputed bills and rectify errors, the Supreme Court held that the Crafts were deprived of their constitutional right to procedural due process.713 Following the Court’s decision in Memphis Light, circuit courts have acknowledged that the expectation of utility service is a protected property interest for procedural due process purposes.714 For example, the Sixth Circuit has recognized that public utility services such as water and gas create a property interest entitled to procedural due process protections.715 The Fourth Circuit has also approved of the holding in Memphis Light, but has emphasized that water and sewer services do not automatically convey a property interest to residents—state law must require the provision of service (as it did under Tennessee law in Memphis Light). In 2003, in Southside Trust v. Town of Fuquay-Varina, the Fourth Circuit held that plaintiffs, who lived in a mobile home park outside the town’s municipal boundaries and disputed the amount of their water and sewer bills, did not establish a property interest for due process purposes because the town was not required by law to provide these services to residents living outside their boundaries.716 Recent litigation challenging the Detroit shutoffs demonstrates the potential difficulty in succeeding on a procedural (or substantive) due process claim involving water services. In 2014, Detroit residents, led by attorney Alice Jennings, challenged the water service shutoffs by the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) by filing a complaint in the city’s bankruptcy proceedings. In Lyda v. City of Detroit, the plaintiffs contended that the shutoffs violated the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the 14th Amendment.717 With respect to due process, plaintiffs alleged that DWSD did not provide them with adequate notice before the shutoffs and did not sufficiently inform them about the possibility of a hearing.718 Plaintiffs also argued that DWSD violated their right to equal protection by disconnecting water services to residential customers in arrears, but not similarly-situated commercial customers.719 Plaintiffs sought a moratorium on the shutoffs and a water affordability plan for residential customers, among other forms of relief.720 In an initial ruling from the bench, the bankruptcy court dismissed the complaint, finding that it did not have jurisdiction because it could not grant the injunctive relief requested by plaintiffs.721 Despite this lack of jurisdiction, the court evaluated plaintiffs’ constitutional claims and found they were without merit.722 The court determined that plaintiffs did not have a property or liberty interest in their water services within the scope of the Due Process Clause.723 The court also determined that plaintiffs could not establish that they had a fundamental right to water services or that they were a suspect class for equal protection purposes.724 It further found that plaintiffs were not otherwise entitled to the requested six-month moratorium on shutoffs, particularly given the plaintiffs’ failure to dispute their bills despite information provided by DWSD on how to do so and the city’s need for revenue from its customer accounts.725 After plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration, the bankruptcy court issued a supplemental opinion. The court’s conclusions were essentially the same as those reached in the bench ruling, with one key difference in its due process analysis. In its new opinion, the court conceded that “it is plausible that the plaintiffs could establish a liberty or property right to water service to which procedural due process rights apply,” citing Memphis Light and other Sixth Circuit cases.726 However, the court also found that DWSD’s notice procedures were constitutionally sufficient.727 In examining plaintiffs’ water bills, the court determined that they gave notice of the amount due, the payment due date, the consequence of failing to pay the bill (i.e., disconnection), and the opportunity to dispute the bill by contacting DWSD.728 Additionally, after a failure to pay, a customer received a shutoff notice advising them that their water service was subject to disconnection.729 This specific content, in the court’s view, established that plaintiffs’ due process allegations were insufficient as a matter of law.730 The court also examined the plaintiffs’ allegation that they were deprived of due process because they were not informed of, or offered, reasonable payment plans.731 Given that most plaintiffs were on payment plans, or 65 had been offered plans but found them unaffordable, it concluded that water affordability was the real crux of plaintiffs’ claim: that plaintiffs were actually alleging that they had a constitutional right to water service at a price they could afford to pay.732 The court noted that Michigan law does not permit a municipality to base its water rates on ability to pay but instead requires it to set rates at the reasonable cost of delivering the service.733 Accordingly, the court found that there is no constitutional or fundamental right to affordable water service or to an affordable payment plan for account arrearages.734 The Eastern District of Michigan affirmed the bankruptcy court’s orders. With respect to the due process claim, the court determined that DWSD’s shutoff notice was constitutionally sufficient.735 It also found that plaintiffs’ equal protection claim failed because the commercial entities, as business entities, were not similarly situated to plaintiffs.736 Plaintiffs appealed to the Sixth Circuit. With respect to the due process claim, the appellate court found that DWSD had changed its service shutoff procedures during the pendency of the litigation.737 Now, DWSD places door hangers on households seven days before a scheduled shutoff. It also provides more information in bills and shutoff notices regarding dispute procedures and the customer’s rights to file a complaint, request and appear at a hearing, enter a payment plan, and delay shutoff in the event of a medical emergency.738 Given these changes, the court was unable to evaluate the bankruptcy court’s review of DWSD’s prior procedures.739 It also affirmed the dismissal of the equal protection claim, determining that there may be a rational basis for the disparate treatment between residential and commercial customers.740 The Sixth Circuit also evaluated the bankruptcy court’s interpretation that plaintiffs’ complaint included a substantive due process claim for the “right to water service at a price they can afford to pay” (both parties agreed that the plaintiffs’ complaint included such a claim) and its conclusion that there is no constitutional or fundamental right to affordable water service or affordable payment plans.741 The court affirmed that there is no constitutional right to continued affordable water service, as “[a] right of this nature is not rooted in our nation’s traditions or implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.”742 Further, because Michigan law directs municipalities to set water rates at the reasonable cost of providing the service, DWSD’s policy of conditioning service on the satisfaction of past due charges was rationally related to maintaining its financial stability.743 Accordingly, it rejected plaintiffs’ substantive due process claim.744 Although not successful in the Lyda litigation, water equality advocates should consider a procedural due process claim when municipalities fail to provide proper notice and an opportunity to be heard prior to disconnecting water service. To establish such a claim, advocates should first determine, as in Memphis Light, whether state or local statutes provide that water service may only be shut off under certain conditions, thereby creating a property interest in continued service.745 As one example, in Ohio, water service may be disconnected only for specified reasons, such as nonpayment, tampering, contamination, and refusal to allow access to utility equipment.746 Additionally, the Baltimore City Code provides limited reasons for water service shutoffs, including nonpayment and unauthorized use.747 As discussed above, in both Ohio and Maryland (excepting Baltimore under the new state law), unpaid water charges can result in a lien on a resident’s property. If the municipality takes a property interest in a resident’s home as a result of unpaid water bills, then it follows that the resident has a property interest in their water service.748 However, success on a procedural due process claim is not guaranteed. If, like in Detroit, the bills and notices sent to customers provide sufficient information to customers about their rights, this type of claim may be a challenge. Still, particular circumstances in the relevant jurisdiction may support a procedural due process claim. As noted above, in Cleveland, the Colegrove consent decree makes clear that the city has the duty and responsibility to provide water and sewer customers with notice and an opportunity to be heard prior to a service shutoff.749 The decree also sets out the rights of the customer, which include: (1) the right to a hearing prior to disconnection of service before an impartial hearing board; and (2) the right to a request a hearing within 10 days of receipt of a shutoff notice, in writing or in person.750 Yet, as the local news team reported and LDF confirmed, as described above, very few Water Review Board hearings are held in Cleveland each year.751 66 Additionally, Baltimore’s DPW eliminated an informal hearing process in 2016 that allowed customers to challenge their bills.752 Now, customers can only dispute water leaks through a written process, and there does not appear to be any mechanism to dispute bills on other grounds.753 There is nothing in Baltimore’s City Code providing for administrative hearings on disputed bills, although local law does grant the Director of Public Works the full power and authority to abate any charge for water, whenever they deem such abatement proper and advisable.754 In 2011, the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland issued an unpublished opinion finding that Baltimore’s hearing process for water bill disputes violated the procedural due process rights of a steel company.755 The court determined that the hearing provided to the company was deficient because it was not on the record, was limited to 15 minutes, and denied the parties the right to cross examination.756 In its opinion, the court noted that: No legislature required the DPW to institute an adjudicative hearing system to resolve complaints about bills for water service … the DPW took this responsibility upon itself, even if it did so informally … Having established, however informally, a system of adjudicatory hearings, the DPW was obligated to operate it in accordance with principles of fundamental fairness, including procedural due process. [DPW’s hearing system] … does not pass constitutional muster.757 This decision does not exactly align with Memphis Light—there, the Supreme Court was clear that due process protections with respect to water service are not optional—but in the years following this ruling, the city entirely eliminated its hearing process.758 The pending city council legislation, which would create the Office of Water-Customer Advocacy and Appeals, would offer the kind of procedural due process protections to which Baltimore residents are fully entitled. A substantive due process challenge related to a right to affordable water would be much more challenging. While water service is a protected property interest for procedural due process purposes, not all property interests that create procedural due process protections necessarily create substantive due process rights.759 In fact, courts have found that substantive due process does not apply to the provision of water or sewer services and that there is no right a healthful environment.760 (In the Flint litigation, as noted above, the plaintiffs styled their substantive due process claim as a violation of their right to bodily integrity and a right to freedom from third-party harms.761) In finding that a substantive due process right did not exist in Lyda, the Sixth Circuit pointed to Michigan law that directs municipalities to set water rates at the reasonable cost of providing the service as support for rejecting a right to affordable water.762 While a plaintiff may be able to distinguish the law that would apply in their case (for example, in Ohio), a court is unlikely to find a substantive due process right to affordable water if solely grounded in state law.763 In Ohio, one statute (that only applies to private water companies) provides that public utility rates must be “just and reasonable”764 and another statute pertaining specifically to water rates notes that they should be assessed “for the purpose of paying the expenses of conducting and managing the waterworks … including operating expenses and the costs of permanent improvements.”765 But unlike Michigan, the statutory language notes that water charges should be assessed and collected in an amount and manner deemed “most equitable from all tenements and premises supplied with water,” which may support a reading of a right to water affordability.766 And private water and wastewater companies in Ohio are permitted to grant free or reduced services for “charitable purposes.”767 While these companies would not likely 67 be subject to a substantive due process claim,768 these statutes provide further support for a right to affordable water in the state. Additionally, municipal legislatures in Ohio can provide that water or wastewater services be “furnished free of charge.”769 In Maryland, public water and wastewater utilities are not subject to regulation by the Maryland Public Service Commission and simply must charge rates that are “reasonable.”770 However, the Baltimore City Code is more specific, requiring rates “to make each utility financially self-sustaining at all times,” to include provisions for operating and maintenance costs; depreciation accruals; amortization of bonds; and reasonable accumulation of surplus.771 In this way, Baltimore’s law is more like Michigan’s. Professor Sharmila Murthy has persuasively argued that the right to affordable water should be considered to have “near-constitutional” status.772 In Professor Murthy’s view, access to safe and affordable drinking water has evolved to a “constitutive commitment,” borrowing a term coined by Professor Cass Sunstein and referring to a statutory right that is treated as if it is a constitutional right because of its special status in our society.773 Water for drinking, hygiene, and sanitation is essential to life.774 As detailed in Part I of this report, the development of our early waterworks systems revolutionized public health and defined the role of a municipality in providing for the wellbeing of its residents. Further, as discussed above, the UN has recognized the human right to safe, affordable water. Numerous federal courts have found the denial of water to prison inmates can violate the U.S. Constitution, and the lack of running water in a home can make it uninhabitable.775 It can also make a home unfit for children, which could infringe on the fundamental right to family, which is protected by substantive due process.776 Ultimately, given the critical importance of modern waterworks, a right to affordable water should arguably be accorded substantive due process protections. Still, it is unlikely that courts will recognize a substantive due process right to affordable water in the near future, given the reluctance to acknowledge other similar rights and the wide-ranging implications of a right to water.777 As noted at the outset of this report, the right to water is a “deeply foreign” concept in American jurisprudence.778 Still, water equality advocates should continue to strategize on ways that courts may eventually recognize a substantive due process right to affordable water. Other Potential Claims Water equality advocates should consider various other claims to address the disproportionate impact that water unaffordability has on Black communities, as described in more detail below. Intentional Discrimination Claims Some actions by local governments—such as disconnecting water service to delinquent customers who live in majority-Black neighborhoods (but not disconnecting delinquent customers in white areas) or differing policies for how water liens are sold in Black neighborhoods versus white areas—could give rise to a suit for intentional discrimination under 42 U.S.C. § 1981 (Section 1981), 42 U.S.C. § 1982 (Section 1982), and/or the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.779 Section 1981 prohibits race-based discrimination in the making and enforcement of contracts, and has been held to apply to claims challenging the discriminatory denial of municipal services.780 Section 1982 prohibits race-based discrimination related to all real and personal property, including discriminatory municipal action benefiting white property owners but not Black owners.781 The Equal Protection Clause prohibits a state from denying any person within its territory the equal protection of the laws, and is also available to plaintiffs seeking to challenge governmental discrimination in the housing market.782 A law that burdens a fundamental right or targets a suspect class triggers elevated scrutiny, requiring the government to justify the classification.783 Other laws trigger only rational basis review.784 While Section 1982 includes a private right of action,785 claims under Section 1981 and the 14th Amendment 68 would need to be brought Section 1983.786 Courts apply similar standards for evaluating claims under Sections 1981 and 1982, as well as violations of the Equal Protection Clause.787 All three claims would require a showing of intentional discrimination, which can be difficult to prove.788 In order to prevail in a case under these provisions, the plaintiff would need to establish municipal liability, meaning that the allegedly discriminatory actions were conducted pursuant to an official policy or could be considered a custom or practice by a final policymaker.789 Once municipal liability was established, the plaintiff would need to demonstrate that (1) they were treated differently from others who were similarly situated; and (2) the treatment was intentionally based on impermissible considerations such as race.790 To demonstrate intent, the plaintiff could rely on the factors articulated by the Supreme Court in Arlington Heights, including: [t]he historical background of the decision … particularly if it reveals a series of official actions taken for invidious purposes, … [t]he specific sequence of events leading up to the challenged decision[,] … [d]epartures from the normal procedural sequence[,] … [s]ubstantive departures … particularly if the factors usually considered important by the decisionmaker strongly favor a decision contrary to the one reached[, and] … [t]he legislative or administrative history.791 Title VI If an individual has evidence of intentional acts of discrimination by a municipality, they could also file suit under Title VI, which requires recipients of federal funds to administer their programs in a non-discriminatory manner.792 Most municipalities receive federal funding to support their water programs and thus are covered by the statute.793 Private parties who file Title VI claims in court must prove intentional discrimination in order to prevail.794 (Note that the Dowdell case is a rare example of the use of Title VI without an additional cause of action under the FHA.795) An individual could also file an administrative complaint under Title VI with the EPA.796 In addition to intentional discrimination, an administrative complaint may allege that the municipality’s actions had a discriminatory effect on a protected class, known as the disparate impact theory of discrimination.797 LDF has regularly filed Title VI complaints.798 However, given the EPA’s abysmal civil rights record (discussed above), this course of action may not be fruitful. The FHA Enacted 51 years ago, the FHA prohibits housing discrimination on the basis of race (and other protected categories).799 The statute was intended to eliminate racial residential segregation and foster integrated housing patterns for the benefit of all Americans.800 The FHA authorizes intentional discrimination and disparate impact claims.801 As will be discussed in a forthcoming law review article, the FHA could be used to challenge water lien sales and water service shutoffs that disproportionately impact Black communities.802 For example, a plaintiff could argue that a city’s water lien or service cutoff practices are chiefly centered in predominantly Black neighborhoods and could lead to an increased risk of foreclosure and eviction, violating the FHA. While no case has ever been filed to date specifically challenging water lien sales or water shutoffs as discriminatory under the FHA, the statute provides favorable and meaningful opportunities for litigation. 69 State FHAs or Civil Rights Statutes All states (save for Mississippi) have laws that provide for fair housing, often encompassed within a more comprehensive statute pertaining to civil rights.803 In addition to pursuing a claim under the federal FHA, a potential plaintiff may want to include the state statute as well. For example, the state law may be broader than the FHA in defining protected classes.804 State Laws Regarding Unfair and Deceptive Practices All states have statutes that generally prohibit unfair or deceptive acts and practices (UDAP), which could apply when a municipality disconnects water service to customers.805 While some UDAP statutes do not apply to utilities regulated by a state public utility commission, public water utilities in the relevant jurisdiction may not be commission-regulated entities.806 State Contract and Tort Theories The National Consumer Law Center has published a comprehensive treatise on potential contract and tort actions that could be brought against utilities.807 Utilities, both private and public, have a duty to serve their customers.808 Utilities must provide service to residents living within their relevant jurisdiction who are willing to pay and comply with the utility’s rules and regulations.809 Pursuant to this duty, utilities must provide adequate and reasonably efficient service, on reasonable terms, without unjust discrimination, and at reasonable rates.810 For utilities that fail to abide by this duty, courts can award damages or grant equitable relief.811 Utilities also owe a duty of care to provide continuing service to their customers. Given that water services are essential to life, a utility may breach this duty, giving rise to a potential negligence and/or breach of contract claim, if it fails to act reasonably in disconnecting service to a customer.812 Utility customers are entitled to courteous treatment from providers. (In April 2019, a water employee from Columbus, Ohio went viral for posting a selfie in his work shirt with the caption “Feeling cute. Might cut off your water later … [I don’t know].”813) Certain conduct that is considered rude, abusive, or demeaning could give rise to a cause of action against a utility company, including under contract law.814 A customer may even be able to pursue damages for mental stress, if, for example, bodily injury is involved.815 Human Rights Framework Finally, emphasizing the human right to water may provide a valuable framework in litigation challenging unfair water practices. While the federal government does not yet recognize the human right to water, it is recognized as a right under international law and in some U.S. states and cities.816 Still, despite the lack of a federal cause of action for this type of violation, human rights principles can and should be used by water equality advocates in litigation and policy advocacy.817 For example, LDF emphasized the human rights issues at stake in its advocacy to halt the Detroit water shutoffs in 2014.818 70 Policy and Research Recommendations In addition to pursuing potential litigation, LDF and other water equality advocates should promote local, state, and federal reforms and commission additional research to support the fight for affordable water. Local and State Reforms There are many reforms that advocates should pursue at the state and local level related to water affordability. Water Lien Sales Advocates should promote state or local legislation banning lien sales based solely on unpaid water or sewer bills, for both homeowners and renters. Instead of placing liens on homes, municipalities could allow delinquent water customers to enter into payment plans, based on their ability to repay debt actually owed.819 Alternatively, state and local governments should raise or establish the minimum amount of arrears that will trigger a tax sale to ensure that residents will not lose their homes for unpaid water bills of just a few hundred dollars.820 States should also revise the process for a homeowner to redeem their home once a lien is placed on it by lowering the maximum interest rate that can be charged on the lien and eliminating other fees and costs. At the very least, homeowners and tenants who are part of vulnerable populations, such as the elderly or people with disabilities, should be exempted from water lien sales.821 Water Service Disconnections Utilities should be barred from disconnecting water services for unpaid water and sewer bills, particularly for arrearages below a certain threshold amount.822 Service disconnections should be strictly prohibited for vulnerable populations, including the elderly, families with young children, people who are pregnant or nursing, and people with disabilities or medical conditions.823 Additionally, utilities should be barred from shutting off services on a per-neighborhood basis, which can result in disparate outcomes based on race in cities with highly segregated housing patterns. Residents should not be forced to pay a penalty to have service reconnected. Customer Assistance Programs Utilities should be required to offer customer assistance programs for low-income and other vulnerable populations (and if necessary, amend or repeal state laws that currently prohibit utilities from offering such programs), based on Philadelphia’s model program.824 Affordability programs should be tailored to meet the needs of the relevant customer base and ensure that residents are charged for water or sewer service based on their actual ability to pay.825 Experts have determined that affordability programs increase the overall amount of revenue that utilities receive for water and sewer services.826 Billing Practices Utilities must take steps to ensure that bills to customers are accurate and promptly correct errors.827 They should be required to provide adequate notice of rate increases, service disconnection and reconnection procedures, and ways for customers to dispute a bill, including the right to a hearing. If utilities do not currently offer customer hearings, they should be required to implement a process for homeowners and tenants to dispute bills and other charges that comports with procedural due process requirements.828 Utilities should also be required to consider and implement other billing changes to aid customers in paying their bills, such as monthly (as opposed to quarterly) billing, payment plans (with no down payments), and rate structures based on usage rather than fixed fees.829 Data Reporting Utilities should be required to engage in mandatory data collection and public reporting on rate increases, arrearages, service disconnections, and water lien sales.830 Data collection should include geographic and demographic information as applicable. 71 Ban on Privatization As in Baltimore, states and localities should consider legislation to prohibit the sale of a public waterworks to a private company. Right to Water Like in California, states and localities should pass legislation establishing the human right to affordable, clean water.831 Federal Policy Advocacy The need for national legislation guaranteeing a right to affordable clean water is paramount. For years, LDF has been part of the National Coalition for Legislation on Water Affordability, founded by Detroit attorney Alice Jennings and others to develop a federal law setting minimum standards for water affordability nationwide.832 Any proposed legislation must require states to enact customer affordability programs for low-income residents. It should also prohibit water service disconnections for nonpayment for vulnerable populations and ban lien sales based solely on water or sewer debt. Advocates should also request increased federal funding for states and municipalities to aid with costly infrastructure improvements and to assist low-income families with water bills. For example, Congress could expand LIHEAP to allow states to provide aid to low-income families for their water and sewer bills or create an equivalent program for water and sewer.833 As briefly discussed above, LIHEAP is a federal block grant program that provides states with funds to assist low-income households with expenses for heating or cooling, as well as energy crisis intervention and weatherization.834 The program was created in response to the oil crisis of the late 1970s.835 While the LIHEAP statute requires states to target assistance to the most vulnerable households, families are eligible for assistance if their incomes are at or below 150 percent of the federal poverty level or 60 percent of state median income.836 Most LIHEAP funds are used to help families pay for heating assistance.837 LIHEAP funds cannot currently be used for water or sewer bills.838 While LIHEAP suffers from a lack of consistent funding, and President Trump proposed eliminated funding for LIHEAP in his budgets for 2018 and 2019,839 an expanded or equivalent program could make great strides in the battle for affordable water for all. Further Research There are various research topics related to water affordability that advocates should consider pursuing. Given that the most common benchmark for water affordability (a percentage of median household income) has been widely criticized and may not be supported by social science research, advocates should determine a more appropriate and validated metric to accurately measure the affordability of water and wastewater bills.840 Additionally, while every state has a process for placing liens on homes for unpaid water or sewer debt, further investigation is needed to determine which jurisdictions across the nation are enforcing these punitive laws. More research is also needed on the lasting effects of water lien sales on communities of color, such as foreclosure and eviction rates.841 72 conclusion LDF and other water equality advocates must continue to play a leading role in alleviating the burden of water unaffordability on Black communities, particularly to address the devastating loss of homeownership due to water lien sales and service disconnections. When appropriate, litigation and legislative reform should be aggressively pursued to tackle water injustices in communities across the nation. Regardless of the form of advocacy, we should draw upon the considerable history provided herein—both of the development of waterworks in the U.S. and the ways that municipalities have used water to assert power over Black communities—as we fight to lessen discrimination in water services and promote access to affordable, clean water as a right that should be shared by all. 73 acknowledgements Coty Montag is a Senior Counsel at LDF and the Project Manager for the Thurgood Marshall Institute. Coty joined LDF in 2015 and served as the Deputy Director of Litigation until 2018. She conducted the research set forth in this report during a sabbatical sponsored by the Institute. Coty would like to thank Sherrilyn Ifill, Janai Nelson, Sam Spital, Jin Hee Lee, and the Institute for their unflagging support during her sabbatical. She is also grateful to Bill Cooper, Catherine Meza, Phoebe Plagens, Marika Bailey, April Avant, Lakisha Belizaire, Gregory Bernstein, Will Searcy, Jyarland Daniels, Jon Jeter, and Ron Regan and his team. Finally, Coty would like to give special thanks to Sparky Abraham and Catherine Blalock for their invaluable assistance. 74 endnotes 1 Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations 26 (S.M. Soares ed., 2007) (1776). 2 Paul Finkelman, Why Access to Water Was Never a “Right”: Historical Perspectives on American Water Law, 18 Willamette J. Int’l L. & Disp. Resol. 168, 169, 172 (2010). 3 Nelson M. Blake, Water for the Cities: A History of the Urban Water Supply Problem in the United States 265 (1956) (citing U.S. Cong., House Comm. on Interior and Insular Affairs, The Physical Basis of Water Supply and its Principal Uses 42 (1952)). 4 Maureen Taylor, When Cities Shut the Water Off, Truthout (Mar. 31, 2019), https://truthout.org/articles/when-cities-shutthe-water-off/. 5 Robert J. Gordon, The Rise and Fall of American Growth: The U.S. Standard of Living Since the Civil War 28 (2017); Carl A. Zimring, Clean and White: A History of Environmental Racism in the United States 52 (2015); Carl Smith, City Water, City Life: Water and the Infrastructure of Ideas in Urbanizing Philadelphia, Boston, and Chicago 2 (2013); Martin V. Melosi, The Sanitary City: Environmental Services in Urban America from Colonial Times to the Present 11, 41 (2008) [hereinafter Melosi, Sanitary City]; see also Martin V. Melosi, Precious Commodity: Providing Water for America’s Cities 4 (2011) [hereinafter Melosi, Precious Commodity]. 6 Zimring, supra note 5, at 13, 29; David Sedlak, Water 4.0: The Past, Present, and Future of the World’s Most Vital Resource 41 (2015); Juliet Christian-Smith & Peter H. Gleick et al., A 21st Century U.S. Water Policy 167 (2012); Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 12; Werner Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease 17 (2004) [hereinafter Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease]; John Duffy, The Sanitarians: A History of American Public Health 30 (1992); Blake, supra note 3, at 8. By 1900, nearly half of all deaths in the United States were due to infectious disease, and waterborne disease accounted for nearly a quarter of reported infectious disease deaths in major cities. David M. Cutler & Grant Miller, The Role of Public Health Improvements in Health Advances: The 20th Century United States, 42 Demography 1, 2-3 (2005), http://www.nber.org/papers/w10511. 7 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 41; Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 15, 18. See also Zimring, supra note 5, at 64; National Research Council, Privatization of Water Services in the United States: An Assessment of Issues and Experience 30 (2002); Duffy, supra note 6, at 75; Blake, supra note 3, at 5, 60. 8 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 56; Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 168; Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 50; Robert D. Morris, The Blue Death: The Intriguing Past and Present of the Water You Drink 162 (2008); Cutler & Miller, supra note 6, at 6-7; Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 40; Blake, supra note 3, at 248, 262. 9 Cutler & Miller, supra note 6, at 1-3; see also Sedlak, supra note 6, at 61; Morris, supra note 8, at 162; Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 50. 10 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 82. In 1860, a report about Philadelphia’s water system observed that: “The water supply to a great city is necessarily one of the most important and interesting features, upon which depends, to a greater extent, possibly, than any of its other advantages, either natural or artificial, its ultimate growth and prosperity.” Smith, supra note 5, at 3 (citing City of Phila., Dep’t for Supplying the City with Water, History of the Works, and Annual Report of the Chief Engineer of the Water Department of the City of Philadelphia 5 (1860)). 11 Smith, supra note 5, at 53. 12 Id. at 54. 13 Id. at 58; see also Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 21; Blake, supra note 3, at 17. 14 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 13 (citing Sam Bass Warner, Jr., The Private City 99 (1987)). 15 Id. at 21 (citing Letty Donaldson Anderson, The Diffusion of Technology in the Nineteenth-Century American City: Municipal Water Supply Investments I (1980)); see also Blake, supra note 3, at 43 (noting that, in constructing Philadelphia’s water system, “[t]he provision of adequate water supply for the inhabitants had been recognized as one of the responsibilities of an adequate city government”). 16 Blake, supra note 3, at 268. 17 Id. 18 Smith, supra note 5, at 92-93. 19 Id. 20 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 21. 76 77 21 Smith, supra note 5, at 57-58; Blake, supra note 3, at 267. 22 Blake, supra note 3, at 63. 23 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 51. By contrast, nearly all sewer systems were public at the outset. Scott E. Masten, Public Utility Ownership in 19th Century America: The “Aberrant” Case of Water, 27 Oxford J.L., Econ., & Org. 604, 611 (2010). 24 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 55. 25 Smith, supra note 5, at 209; Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 83-84. By 1860, municipal debt was three times the federal debt and almost equal to the aggregate state debt. Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 53. Between 1860 and 1920, municipal debt increased from $200 million to more than $3 billion. Melosi, Precious Commodity, supra note 5, at 114. 26 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 84-85; Blake, supra note 3, at 77, 268; see also Craig Anthony Arnold, Privatization of Public Water Services: The States’ Role in Ensuring Public Accountability, 32 Pepp. L. Rev. 561, 568 (2005). 27 Melosi, Precious Commodity, supra note 5, at 39 (citing Charles David Jacobson, Ties That Bind: Economic and Political Dilemmas of Urban Utility Networks, 1800-1900, at 3-11 (2000)); Masten, supra note 23, at 622. 28 Masten, supra note 23, at 625-26. 29 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 83. 30 Blake, supra note 3, at 77; see also Masten, supra note 23, at 605; Arnold, supra note 26, at 567. 31 Masten, supra note 23, at 605. 32 Smith, supra note 5, at 55. 33 Id. 34 Id. 35 Carla L. Peterson, Black Gotham: A Family History of African Americans in Nineteenth-Century New York City 35-62 (2012). 36 Id. at 56. In part due to the rampant pollution of this area, Collect Street was rebranded as Centre Street in the mid-1820s. Id. at 57. 37 Id. at 59; Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 41-42. 38 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 41 (citing Howard N. Rabinowitz, Race Relations in the Urban South, 1865-1890, at 114-21 (1980)); Robert D. Bullard, Dumping in Dixie: Race, Class, and Environmental Quality 25 (2000). 39 Peterson, supra note 35, at 59. 40 Duffy, supra note 6, at 116. 41 Id. at 180. 42 W.E.B. Du Bois, The Philadelphia Negro: A Social Study 1 (2017 reprint) (1899). 43 Id. at 1, 50. 44 Id. at 405. 45 Id. at 149-51. 46 Id. at 162. 47 Id. at 161. 48 Id. at 161, 292. 49 Id. at 292, 294. 50 Id. at 293. 51 Id. at 294. 52 Id. at 293. 53 Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 8. 54 Id. at 3. 55 Id. at 4. 56 Id. at 9. 57 Id. at 8, 63. 58 Id. at 37. 59 Id. at 9. 60 Id. at 36. 61 Kenneth L. Kusmer, A Ghetto Takes Shape: Black Cleveland, 1870-1930 13 (1978). 62 In 1911, Baltimore passed the first legislative mandate in the country pertaining to racial residential segregation. Matthew A. Crenson, Baltimore: A Political History 340-42 (2017). Following the passage of Baltimore’s ordinance, The New York Times wrote that “nothing like it can be found in any statute book or ordinance record of this country. It is unique in legislation, Federal, State, or municipal—an ordinance so far-reaching in the logical sequence that must result from its enforcement that it may be said to mark a new era in social legislation.” Antero Pietila, Not in My Neighborhood: How Bigotry Shaped a Great American City 23 (2010). After the bill was approved in Baltimore, other cities with large Black populations (including Richmond, Winston-Salem, Birmingham, Atlanta, Louisville, St. Louis, and New Orleans, among others) were quick to follow with similar ordinances. Id. 63 Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 36. 64 Id. at 67. 65 Id. at 71. 66 Id. at 72. 67 Id. at 72-73. 68 Id. at 73. 69 Id. at 74. 70 Id. 71 Id. at 78. 72 Id. 73 Id. 74 Id. at 198. 75 Id. at 88-91. 76 Id. 77 Id. at 80, 84. 78 Id. at 80. 79 Id. at 89. Cutler & Miller, supra note 6, at 13 (citing Werner Troesken, The Limits of Jim Crow: Race and the Provision of Water and 80 Sewerage Services in American Cities, 1889-1925, 62 J. of Econ. Hist. 734 (2002)); see also Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 55; Nancy Tomes, The Gospel of Germs: Men, Women, and the Microbe in American Life 185 (1999); John H. Ellis, Yellow Fever & Public Health in the New South 114-15 (1992); Duffy, supra note 6, at 176-78. 81 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 130-31. 82 Richard Rothstein, The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America 70, 72, 85 (2017); Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 131, 173. 83 Marc Levinson, An Extraordinary Time: The End of the Postwar Boom and the Return of the Ordinary Economy 20 (2016). 84 Gordon, supra note 5, at 5. 85 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 181; see also Blake, supra note 3, at 271-72. 86 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 180-81. 87 Id. at 180 (citing George P. Hanna, Jr., Domestic Use and Reuse of Water Supply, J. of Geo. 60 (Jan. 1961)). 88 Id. at 51, 181. 89 Id. 90 Melosi, Precious Commodity, supra note 5, at 65. By 1946, the nation’s inland waterways were receiving untreated sewage from 47 million people. Sedlak, supra note 6, at 81. 91 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 70. 92 Id. 93 Id. at 85. 94 Id. at 86. 95 See, e.g., Sten-Erik Hoidal, Returning to the Roots of Environmental Justice: Lessons from the Inequitable Distribution of Municipal Services, 88 Minn. L. Rev. 193, 199 (2003); U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, Origins of EPA, https://www.epa.gov/history/ origins-epa (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 96 Melosi, Precious Commodity, supra note 5, at 70-71. 97 Id.; see also U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, EPA History, https://www.epa.gov/history (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 98 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 87; Melosi, Precious Commodity, supra note 5, at 74. 99 U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, Understanding the Safe Drinking Water Act (Jun. 2004), https://www.epa.gov/sites/ production/files/2015-04/documents/epa816f04030.pdf. 100 U.S. Cong. Budget Office, Public Spending on Transportation and Water Infrastructure, Publ’n No. 49910, at Tables W-7 and W-8 (Sept. 5, 2017), https://www.cbo.gov/publication/49910 (follow URL and then select link to the “Supplemental Tables” in the “Data and Supplemental Information” section). 101 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 165. 102 Alex Prud’homme, The Ripple Effect: The Fate of Freshwater in the 21st Century 344 (2012); Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 218. 103 Melosi, Precious Commodity, supra note 5, at 189. 104 Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 227; National Research Council, supra note 7, at 10. 105 Douglas Jehl, As Cities Move to Privatize Water, Atlanta Steps Back, N.Y. Times (Feb. 10, 2003), https://www.nytimes. com/2003/02/10/us/as-cities-move-to-privatize-water-atlanta-steps-back.html. 106 Gary H. Wolff, Public or Private Water Management? Cutting the Gordian Knot, J. of Water Resources Plan. & Mgmt., Jan.-Feb. 2004, at 1. 78 79 107 Elana Ramos, The Dangers of Water Privatization: An Exploration of the Discriminatory Practices of Private Water Companies, 7 Barry U. Envtl. & Earth L.J. 188, 210 (2017). 108 Id. 109 Prud’homme, supra note 102, at 271. 110 See, e.g., Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 178; Sedlak, supra note 6, at 165. 111 U.S. Gov’t Accountability Office, Water Infrastructure: Information on Selected Midsize and Large Cities with Declining Populations 11 (Sept. 2016), https://www.gao.gov/assets/680/679783.pdf [hereinafter Declining Populations]. 112 Id. 113 Id. 114 Id. 115 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 176; Am. Soc’y of Civ. Engineers, 2017 Infrastructure Report Card: Drinking Water 2 (2017), https://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Drinking-Water-Final.pdf [hereinafter 2017 Drinking Water Report Card]. 116 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 170; 2017 Drinking Water Report Card, supra note 115, at 1; see also Am. Soc’y of Civ. Engineers, Failure to Act: Closing the Infrastructure Investment Gap for America’s Economic Future 15 (2016), https:// www.infrastructurereportcard.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/ASCE-Failure-to-Act-2016-FINAL.pdf [hereinafter Failure to Act]. Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 169. 117 118 Id. at 11, 169; 2017 Drinking Water Report Card, supra note 115, at 3; see also Charles Fishman, The Big Thirst: The Secret Life and Turbulent Future of Water 22 (2012) [hereinafter Fishman, Big Thirst]. 119 Fishman, Big Thirst, supra note 118, at 22. 120 Rothstein, supra note 82, at vii. 121 Id. at 70. 122 Id. at 63-64. 123 Id. at 113, 199. 124 Id. at 78-79, 82. 125 Id. at 95-96. 126 Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 36; Daniel T. Lichter et al., Municipal Underbounding: Annexation and Racial Exclusion in Small Southern Towns, 72 Rural Soc. 47, 50 (2007). 127 Nat’l Crim. Just. Reference Serv., Report of the National Advisory Comm’n on Civil Disorders 81-83 (1968), https://www. ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/Digitization/8073NCJRS.pdf. 128 Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 96; Charles M. Haar & Daniel Wm. Fessler, The Wrong Side of the Tracks: A Revolutionary Rediscovery of the Common Law Tradition of Fairness in the Struggle Against Inequality 12 (1986). 129 Haar & Fessler, supra note 128, at 12. 130 Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 96. 131 Haar & Fessler, supra note 128, at 12. 132 Id. at 31. 133 Hawkins v. Town of Shaw, 437 F.2d 1286, 1290 (5th Cir. 1971). 134 Id. at 1290-91. 135 Id. at 1291. 136 Haar & Fessler, supra note 128, at 30. 137 Id. at 31. 138 Id. 139 Id. at 32. 140 Id. at 12. 141 Id. at 39 (citing 394 U.S. 802, 807 (1969)). 142 Hawkins v. Town of Shaw, 303 F. Supp. 1162, 1169 (N.D. Miss. 1969). 143 Id. at 1168-69. 144 Id. 145 Id. at 1169. Note that Professors Haar and Fessler stated that “[i]t is impossible to determine whether this deferential language was grounded in naïve notions of political realities, in a strict devotion to the doctrine of separation of powers, or in a desire to maintain the social and racial status quo in Mississippi.” Haar & Fessler, supra note 128, at 40. 146 Haar & Fessler, supra note 128, at 41. 147 Shaw, 437 F.2d at 1292. 148 Id. at 1287. 149 Id. at 1291. 150 Id. 151 Id. at 1293. 152 Hawkins v. Town of Shaw, 461 F.2d 1171, 1173 (5th Cir. 1972). 153 Id. at 1174. 154 Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 94. 155 NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., LDF Victorious in Hawkins v. Town of Shaw, LDF Archives (Mar. 28, 1972). 156 Ronald Sullivan, An Effort to Banish ‘The Other Side of the Tracks,’ N.Y. Times (Feb. 7, 1971), https://www.nytimes. com/1971/02/07/archives/an-effort-to-banish-the-other-side-of-the-tracks-civil-rights.html. 157 Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 93. 158 426 U.S. 229, 242 (1976). 159 Id. at 245 n.12. 160 Morgan Brennan, America’s Friendliest Towns, Forbes (Dec. 19, 2012), https://www.forbes.com/sites/morganbrennan/2012/12/19/americas-friendliest-towns/#43c8598261cb. 161 The report’s author, Coty Montag, is originally from Apopka, and one of the defendants in the Dowdell v. City of Apopka case, John Land, was her great-uncle. 162 Dowdell v. City of Apopka, 511 F. Supp. 1375, 1377 (M.D. Fla. 1981). 163 Id. 164 Troesken, Water, Race, and Disease, supra note 6, at 102. 511 F. Supp. at 1378. 165 166 Id. 167 Id. at 1377. 168 Id. at 1378. 169 Id. at 1379-82. 170 Id. at 1379-80. 171 Id. at 1384. 172 Dowdell v. City of Apopka, 698 F.2d 1181 (11th Cir. 1983). 173 Id. at 1186 (citing 429 U.S. 252 (1976)). 174 Id. 175 Stephen Hudak, Apopka Decides No Pedestal for John Land Memorial Statue, Orlando Sentinel (Jun. 17, 2017), http:// www.orlandosentinel.com/news/orange/os-apopka-john-land-statue-20170612-story.html. 176 Stephen Hudak, Black Leaders Seek More Diversity, Opportunity in Apopka, Orlando Sentinel (Mar. 30, 2015), http:// www.orlandosentinel.com/news/breaking-news/os-one-apopka-for-progress-uproar-20150330-story.html. 177 See, e.g., Jill E. Evans, Challenging the Racism in Environmental Racism: Redefining the Concept of Intent, 40 Ariz. L. Rev. 1219, 1230 (1998). 178 Zimring, supra note 5, at 213. 179 Id. at 213-14. 180 Id. at 214; see also Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 219. 181 Zimring, supra note 5, at 215. See also Robert D. Bullard et al., Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty: 1987-2007: A Report Prepared for the United Church of Christ Justice & Witness Ministries (Mar. 2007), https://www.nrdc.org/sites/default/files/toxicwastes-and-race-at-twenty-1987-2007.pdf; Ronald D. Fricker & Nicolas W. Hengartner, Environmental Equity and the Distribution of Toxic Release Inventory and Other Environmentally Undesirable Sites in Metropolitan New York City, 8 Envtl. & Eco. Stats. 33 (Mar. 2001), https://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1009649815643. 182 See, e.g., Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 219. 183 Evans, supra note 177, at 1249. 184 Envtl. Equity Workgroup, U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, Environmental Equity: Reducing Risk for All Communities, Workgroup Report to the Administrator 11, 13 (1992). 185 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 54; see also Melosi, Sanitary City, supra note 5, at 220. 186 U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, Office of Environmental Justice in Action, https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/ files/2017-09/documents/epa_office_of_environmental_justice_factsheet.pdf. 187 U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, National Environmental Justice Advisory Council, https://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice/national-environmental-justice-advisory-council (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 188 Exec. Order 12898, 59 Fed. Reg. 32 (Feb. 11, 1994), https://www.archives.gov/files/federal-register/executive-orders/pdf/12898.pdf. 189 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 55. 190 Id. 191 Id. 192 Kristen Lombardi, Talia Buford & Ronnie Greene, Environmental Racism Persists, and the EPA is One Reason Why, The Ctr. for Public Integrity (Aug. 3, 2015), https://www.publicintegrity.org/2015/08/03/17668/environmental-racism-persists-and-epa-one-reason-why. 80 81 193 40 C.F.R. §§ 7.10 et seq. 194 NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., LDF, Earthjustice, and the Environmental Law Clinic at Yale Fight Landfill in Historic Black Alabama Community (Mar. 4, 2018), https://www.naacpldf.org/case-issue/ldf-earthjustice-environmental-justice-law-clinic-yale-fight-landfill-historic-black-alabama-community/. 195 Talia Buford & Kristen Lombardi, Report Slams EPA Civil Rights Compliance, The Ctr. for Public Integrity (Sept. 23, 2016), https://www.publicintegrity.org/2016/09/23/20256/report-slams-epa-civil-rights-compliance. 196 Michael D. Shear, Trump Will Withdraw U.S. From Paris Climate Agreement, N.Y. Times (Jun. 1, 2017), https://www. nytimes.com/2017/06/01/climate/trump-paris-climate-agreement.html. 197 Id. 198 Merrit Kennedy & Susan Phillips, Trump Aims to ‘Eliminate’ Clean Water Rule, NPR (Feb. 28, 2017), https://www.npr.org/ sections/thetwo-way/2017/02/28/517016071/trump-aims-to-eliminate-clean-water-rule. 199 Brady Dennis, EPA Under Trump Shrinks to Near Reagan-Era Staffing Levels, Wash. Post (Sept. 6, 2017), https://www. washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2017/09/06/epa-under-trump-shrinks-to-near-reagan-era-staffing-levels/?utm_term=.3ef034b6d101. 200 Lisa Friedman, E.P.A. Scrubs a Climate Website of ‘Climate Change,’ N.Y. Times (Oct. 20, 2017), https://www.nytimes. com/2017/10/20/climate/epa-climate-change.html. 201 Nadja Popovich, Livia Albeck-Ripka & Kendra Pierre-Louis, 78 Environmental Rules on the Way Out Under Trump, N.Y. Times (updated Dec. 28, 2018), https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/10/05/climate/trump-environment-rules-reversed. html?_r=0; Talia Buford, How the Trump Administration is Reshaping the EPA, PBS (Dec. 19, 2017), https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/how-the-trump-administration-is-reshaping-the-epa. Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 56; 62-63. See also Rachel Butts & Stephen Gasteyer, More Cost Per 202 Drop: Water Rates, Structural Inequality, and Race in the United States-The Case of Michigan, 13 Envtl. Prac. 386 (2011). 203 Blake, supra note 3, at 238 (citing Journal of First Branch at 840 (Jan. Sess. 1853)). 204 Robert Snell & Steve Pardo, Judge Won’t Stop Shut-offs, Says No Right to Free Water, The Detroit News (Sept. 29, 2014), https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/local/wayne-county/2014/09/29/bankruptcy-judge-expected-rule-water-shutoffs/16414323/. The Lyda case is discussed further in Part III of this report. 205 John E. Cromwell, III et al., Stratus Consulting, Best Practices in Customer Payment Assistance Programs 29, 31 (2010), http://www.waterrf.org/publicreportlibrary/4004.pdf; see also Darlene Wong et al., Nat’l Consumer Law Ctr., Review and Recommendations for Implementing Water and Wastewater Affordability Programs in the United States 3 (Mar. 2014), http://www. nclc.org/images/pdf/pr-reports/report-water-affordability.pdf. 206 Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 31. 207 Brett Walton, The Price of Water: 2010-2018, Circle of Blue, https://www.circleofblue.org/waterpricing/ (last visited May 12, 2019). 208 Brett Walton, Price of Water 2015: Up 6 Percent in 30 Major U.S. Cities, 41 Percent Rise Since 2010, Circle of Blue (Apr. 22, 2015), https://www.circleofblue.org/2015/world/price-of-water-2015-up-6-percent-in-30-major-u-s-cities-41-percent-risesince-2010/ [hereinafter Walton, Price of Water 2015]; see also Wong et al., supra note 205, at 5 (noting that water rates are rising faster than any other utility rate, including heating bills). 209 Brett Walton, Price of Water 2018: Utilities Revise Household Water Rate Formulas, Circle of Blue (May 30, 2018), https:// www.circleofblue.org/2018/water-management/pricing/price-of-water-2018/ [hereinafter Walton, Price of Water 2018]. 210 See, e.g., Sedlak, supra note 6, at 173-74; 2017 Drinking Water Report Card, supra note 115, at 1. 211 Am. Water Works Ass’n, 2018 State of the Water Industry Report 7-8 (2018), https://www.awwa.org/Portals/0/ AWWA/Development/Managers/2018_SOTWI_Report_Final_v3.pdf [hereinafter 2018 State of Water Industry]. 212 See generally Failure to Act, supra note 116; 2017 Drinking Water Report Card, supra note 115, at 1-2. 213 2017 Drinking Water Report Card, supra note 115, at 1-2. 214 Am. Soc’y of Civ. Engineers, 2009 Report Card for America’s Infrastructure (2009), https://www.infrastructurereportcard. org/making-the-grade/report-card-history/2009-report-card/. 215 2017 Drinking Water Report Card, supra note 115. 216 Am. Soc’y of Civ. Engineers, 2017 Infrastructure Report Card: Wastewater (2017), https://www.infrastructurereportcard. org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Wastewater-Final.pdf. 217 Failure to Act, supra note 116, at 15. 218 Patricia Buckley, Lester Gunnion & Will Sarni, The Aging Water Infrastructure: Out of Sight, Out of Mind? 3 (Mar. 21, 2016), https://www2.deloitte.com/insights/us/en/economy/issues-by-the-numbers/us-aging-water-infrastructure-investment-opportunities.html. 219 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 169. 220 U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment, Fifth Report to Congress (2013), https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-07/documents/epa816r13006.pdf; U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, Clean Watersheds Needs Survey 2012: Report to Congress, EPA-832-R-15005 (2016), https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/ files/2015-12/documents/cwns_2012_report_to_congress-508-opt.pdf. 221 Am. Water Works Ass’n, Buried No Longer: Confronting America’s Water Infrastructure Challenge 10 (2012), http:// www.allianceforwaterefficiency.org/uploadedFiles/Resource_Center/Landing_Pages/AWWA-BuriedNoLonger-2012.pdf. 222 Nat’l Academy of Public Admin., Developing a New Framework for Community Affordability of Clean Water Services 21 (2017), https://www.napawash.org/uploads/Academy_Studies/NAPA_EPA_FINAL_REPORT_110117.pdf [hereinafter Community Affordability]; Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 12; Walton, Price of Water 2015, supra note 208. 223 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 178-79; Sedlak, supra note 6, at 180; Patricia A. Jones & Amber Moulton, Unitarian Universalist Serv. Comm., The Invisible Water Crisis: Water Unaffordability in the United States 28 (May 2016), https:// www.uusc.org/sites/default/files/water_report_july_2016_update.pdf. 224 See, e.g., Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 175-76. 225 Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 2, 13. 226 Joseph Kane, Investing in Water: Comparing Utility Finances and Economic Concerns Across U.S. Cities 2 (Dec. 14, 2016), https://www.brookings.edu/research/investing-in-water-comparing-utility-finances-and-economic-concerns-across-u-s-cities/. 227 U.S. Cong. Budget Office, supra note 100, at Table W-8. 228 Food & Water Watch, U.S. Water Systems Need Sustainable Funding: The Case for Water Affordability, Transparency, Equity and Reliability Act 1 (2016), https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/sites/default/files/fs_1605_wateract-web.pdf. 229 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 176. 230 See Andrea Kopaskie, Public vs Private: A National Overview of Water Systems, UNC Envtl. Fin. Ctr. (Oct. 19, 2016), http://efc.web.unc.edu/2016/10/19/public-vs-private-a-national-overview-of-water-systems/. 231 Elizabeth A. Mack & Sarah Wrase, A Burgeoning Crisis? A Nationwide Assessment of the Geography of Water Affordability in the United States, PLOS One 12(4):e0176645, 3 (Jan. 11, 2017), http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/ journal.pone.0169488. 232 National Research Council, supra note 7, at 1; Arnold, supra note 26, at 564. 233 Arnold, supra note 26, at 570; Sharon Lerner & Leana Hoser, From Pittsburgh to Flint: The Dire Consequences of Giving Private Companies Responsibility for Ailing Public Water Systems, The Intercept (May 20, 2018), https://theintercept. com/2018/05/20/pittsburgh-flint-veolia-privatization-public-water-systems-lead/. 234 Food & Water Watch, The State of Public Water in the United States 3 (Feb. 2016), https://www.foodandwaterwatch. org/sites/default/files/report_state_of_public_water.pdf. 235 Danielle Ivory, Ben Protess & Griff Palmer, In American Towns, Private Profits from Public Works, N.Y. Times (Dec. 24, 2016), https://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/24/business/dealbook/private-equity-water.html. 236 Id. 237 Id. 238 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 75 (citing various studies). 239 Lerner & Hoser, supra note 233. 240 Office of Governor Rick Snyder, State of Mich., Flint Water Timeline: Key Dates, https://www.michigan.gov/documents/ snyder/FlintWaterTimeline_FINAL_511424_7.pdf. 241 Lerner & Hoser, supra note 233; see also Julia Lurie, How One Company Contaminated Pittsburgh’s Drinking Water, Wired (Oct. 28, 2016), https://www.wired.com/2016/10/pittsburghs-drinking-water-got-contaminated-lead/. 242 Lerner & Hoser, supra note 233. 243 Rianna Eckel, Baltimore Becomes First Big U.S. City to Ban Water Privatization, Food & Water Watch (Nov. 8, 2018), https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/news/baltimore-becomes-first-big-us-city-ban-water-privatization. 244 See, e.g., Fishman, Big Thirst, supra note 118, at 8. See also Jason Amirhadji et al., Georgetown L. Hum. Rts. Inst., Tapped Out: Threats to the Human Right to Water in the Urban United States 20 (2013), https://www.law.georgetown.edu/human-rights-institute/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2017/07/Tapped-Out.pdf (citing Sheila M. Olmstead et al., Water Demand Under Alternative Price Structures, 54 J. Envtl. Econ. & Mgmt. 181, 183 (2007)). 245 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 185. 246 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 176; Cynthia Barnett, Hey America: It’s Time to Talk About the Price of Water, Ensia (Oct. 6, 2014), https://ensia.com/features/hey-america-its-time-to-talk-about-the-price-of-water/; see also Fishman, Big Thirst, supra note 118, at 8. 247 Fishman, Big Thirst, supra note 118, at 267. 248 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 167 (citing R. Anderson, U.S. Conf. of Mayors, Who Pays for the Water Pipes, Pumps and Treatment Works?—Local Government Expenditures on Sewer and Water, 1991 to 2005 (2007)). 249 Failure to Act, supra note 116. 250 Sedlak, supra note 6, at 167. 251 Fishman, Big Thirst, supra note 118; Butts & Gasteyer, supra note 202, at 387. 252 Butts & Gasteyer, supra note 202, at 387. 253 2018 State of Water Industry, supra note 211, at 7. 82 83 254 Id. at 11; Butts & Gasteyer, supra note 202, at 276. 255 2018 State of Water Industry, supra note 211, at 12. 256 See UNC Envtl. Fin. Ctr., UNC Sch. of Gov’t, Navigating Legal Pathways to Rate-Funded Customer Assistance Programs: A Guide for Water and Wastewater Utilities (2017), https://efc.sog.unc.edu/sites/default/files/2018/FINAL_Pathways%20to%20 Rate-Funded%20CAPs.pdf (state-by-state analysis of how water rates may be set) [hereinafter Navigating Legal Pathways]. See also Wong et al., supra note 205, at 6; Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 93. 257 Water Res. Found., Knowledge Portals: Utility Finance Revenue FAQs, http://www.waterrf.org/knowledge/utility-finance/revenue/Pages/faqs.aspx (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 258 Walton, Price of Water 2015, supra note 208. 259 2018 State of Water Industry, supra note 211, at 17; see also Walton, Price of Water 2018, supra note 209. 260 Fishman, Big Thirst, supra note 118, at 277. 261 Id.; see also Butts & Gasteyer, supra note 202, at 387. 262 Butts & Gasteyer, supra note 202, at 393; Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 7-8. 263 Butts & Gasteyer, supra note 202, at 388; see also Sharmila L. Murthy, A New Constitutive Commitment to Water, 36 B.C. J.L. & Soc. Just. 159, 171 (2016). 264 Butts & Gasteyer, supra note 202, at 393; Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 7-8. 265 Walton, Price of Water 2018, supra note 209. These figures reflect the average monthly cost of water for a family of four using 150 gallons per person per day. 266 2017 Drinking Water Report Card, supra note 115, at 2; Sedlak, supra note 6, at 165; Wong et al., supra note 205, at 1011; Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 21. 267 Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 32. 268 Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 30. 269 See, e.g., Joan Jacobson, Abell Found., Keeping the Water On: Strategies for Addressing High Increases in Water and Sewer Rates for Baltimore’s Most Vulnerable Customers, 29 The Abell Report 1, 3 (Nov. 2016), https://www.abell.org/sites/default/files/publications/Keeping%20the%20Water%20On.pdf [hereinafter Jacobson, Keeping the Water On]; Office of Water, U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, Report to Congress: Small Systems Arsenic Implementation Issues 4 (Mar. 2002), https://nepis.epa. gov/Exe/ZyPdf.cgi?Dockey=20001ZJL.txt; U.S. Envtl. Protection Agency, Affordability Criteria for Small Drinking Water Systems: An EPA Science Advisory Board Report by the Environmental Economics Advisory Committee of the EPA Science Advisory (Dec. 30, 2002). See also Mack & Wrase, supra note 231, at 3 (citing benchmarks for affordability as a measure of income, including the United Nations Development Program and United Kingdom’s Department of the Environment, Transport, and the Regions (three percent of household income), the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (three to five percent), and the Unitary Universalist Service Committee (2.5 percent)); Wong et al., supra note 205, at 8. 270 See, e.g., Stratus Consulting, Affordability Assessment Tool for Federal Water Mandates 4 (2013), https://www.awwa. org/Portals/0/AWWA/ETS/Resources/AffordabilityAssessmentTool.pdf. 271 Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 49. 272 Community Affordability, supra note 222, at 45. 273 Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 6; Wong et al., supra note 205, at 9; Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 28. 274 Wong et al., supra note 205, at 10-11. 275 Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 15. 276 See, e.g., George McGraw, For Millions of Americans, Lack of Access to Water Isn’t Just a Drought Problem, L.A. Times (Mar. 22, 2018), http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-mcgraw-water-poverty-data-20180322-story.html; Charles Fishman, Water is Broken. Data Can Fix It, N.Y. Times (Mar. 17, 2016), https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/17/opinion/the-waterdata-drought.html; Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 25. 277 Jones & Moulton, supra note 223. 278 Office of the High Comm’r, U.N. Hum. Rts., Joint Press Statement by Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing as a Component of the Right to an Adequate Standard of Living and to Right to Non-discrimination in this Context, and Special Rapporteur on the Human Right to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation, Visit to City of Detroit (Oct. 20, 2014), http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/displaynews.aspx?newsid=15188. 279 Letter from Rudolph S. Chow, Director of the Dep’t of Public Works of the City of Balt., to the Hon. Mary L. Washington, Ph.D., Delegate, Md. House of Delegates (Sept. 25, 2017), in Roger Colton, Food & Water Watch, Baltimore’s Conundrum: Charging for Water/Wastewater Services that Community Residents Cannot Afford to Pay 66-70 (Nov. 2017), https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/sites/default/files/baltimore_water_study-final_report-2017.pdf [hereinafter Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum]. 280 Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 25. 281 Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 27. 282 See, e.g., Sarah Frostenson, America Has a Water Crisis No One is Talking About, Vox (May 9, 2017), https://www. vox.com/science-and-health/2017/5/9/15183330/america-water-crisis-affordability-millions; Joseph Erbentrout, Water Could Soon be Unaffordable for Millions of Americans, Huffington Post (Jan. 31, 2017), https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/water-af- fordability-study_us_588b6bf7e4b0303c075332e4; Charlie Sorrel, A Third of the U.S. Population Won’t Be Able to Afford Water Bills in Just Five Years, Fast Co. (Jan. 25, 2017), https://www.fastcompany.com/3067513/a-third-of-the-us-population-wont-beable-to-afford-water-bills-in-just-5-years. 283 Mack & Wrase, supra note 231, at 7. 284 Id. at 3. 285 Id. at 4. 286 Id. at 7. 287 Id. at 5. 288 Id. 289 Id. at 7. 290 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 62. 291 Many states have statutes to this effect. See, e.g., Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5321.04 (requiring landlords to supply running water and reasonable amounts of hot water); Balt. City Hous. Code, § 35-3-101, https://www.peoples-law.org/rental-and-housing-laws-baltimore-county-county-laws (last visited Mar. 26, 2019) (landlord prohibited from denying essential services such as running water). See also Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 27. 292 See Roger Colton, Collecting Water Bills in Easton, Pennsylvania 13, 17, 22 (2002), http://www.fsconline.com/ downloads/Papers/2002%2009%20easton-water-bills.pdf; Easton City Code, Art. 1, §  572-2(B)(4)(c), https://ecode360. com/9641786 (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 31, 35. 293 294 Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 27. 295 Kat Stafford, Controversial Water Shutoffs Could Hit 17,461 Detroit Households, Detroit Free Press (Mar. 26, 2018), https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/detroit/2018/03/26/more-than-17-000-detroit-households-risk-watershutoffs/452801002/. 296 NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., LDF and ACLU Ask for Immediate Moratorium on Detroit’s Water Shut-offs (Jul. 18, 2014), http://www.naacpldf.org/case-issue/detroit-water-shutoff-crisis. 297 Stafford, supra note 295. 298 Allie Gross, Experts See Public Health Crisis in Detroit Water Shutoffs, Detroit Free Press (Jul. 26, 2017), https://www. freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/detroit/2017/07/26/detroit-water-shutoffs/512243001/. 299 Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 72-73. 300 Maria Zamudio & Will Craft, So Close, Yet So Costly, APM Reports (Feb. 7, 2019), https://www.apmreports.org/story/2019/02/07/great-lakes-water-shutoffs. 301 See, e.g., Ala. Code §  11-50-92; Ark. Code Ann. §  14-218-114; Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. §  9-511.02; Cal. Gov’t Code § 43008; Colo. Rev. Stat. § 31-20-105; Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 7-239, 49-72; Del. Code Ann. tit. 25, § 2901; D.C. Code Ann. § 342407.02; Fla. Stat. § 159.17; Ga. Code Ann. § 36-60-17; Idaho Code § 42-3212; 65 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/11-139-8; Ind. Code Ann. § 36-9-23-32; Iowa Code § 384.84; Kan. Stat. Ann. § 12-808c; Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 376.265; La. Stat. Ann. § 33:3969; Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 35-A, § 6111-A, tit. 38, § 1208; Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-804; Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 40, §§ 42A, 58; Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 141.121(3); Minn. Stat. § 444.075; Miss. Code Ann. § 21-19-2; Mo. Rev. Stat. § 250.234; Mont. Code Ann. § 7-13-3024; Neb. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 16-682; Nev. Rev. Stat. § 244.36605; N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 38:22; N.J. Stat. Ann. § 40:14A-21, :14B-42; N.M. Stat. Ann. § 3-28-16; N.C. Gen. Stat. § 160A-314 to -314.1; N.D. Cent. Code § 40-24-01; Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §§ 743.04, 6103.02; Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 82, § 642; Or. Rev. Stat. § 223.594(2); 53 Pa. Stat. and Cons. Stat. § 7106; R.I. Gen. Laws § 44-9-3; S.C. Code. Ann. §§ 5-31-1560, -2040; S.D. Codified Laws § 46A-10B-24; Tenn. Code Ann. § 7-35-202; Tex. Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 552.0025(d); Utah Code Ann. § 10-8-17; Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 24, § 3306; Va. Code Ann. § 15.2-2118; Wash. Rev. Code Ann. § 35.21.290; W. Va. Code Ann. § 8-18-23; Wis. Stat. Ann. § 66.0809; Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 41-10-117. In some states, the lien process is set forth in local ordinances. See, e.g., North Pole, Alaska Mun. Code § 13.28.010; Balt. City Code, Art. 24, § 1-2(c); Hawaii County, Haw. Ordinance ch. 21, art. 5, § 21-37; N.Y.C., N.Y. Admin. Code § 11-301. 302 See, e.g., Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 9-511.02; D.C. Code Ann. § 34-2407.02; Fla. Stat. § 159.17; 65 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/11-139-8; Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 35-A, § 6111-A; Mo. Rev. Stat. § 250.234; N.J. Stat. Ann. § 40:14A-21; Or. Rev. Stat. § 223.594(2); Tenn. Code Ann. § 7-35-202; W. Va. Code Ann. § 8-18-23. 303 Brianna Sacks, Flint Residents Win Battle Over Losing Their Homes Because of Unpaid Water Bills, BuzzFeed News (May 17, 2017), https://www.buzzfeed.com/briannasacks/flint-michigan-tax-liens?utm_term=.aylkEdQ0d#.uuzGgvMev; NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc. & ACLU of Michigan, Moratorium on Placement of Liens on Homes for Unpaid Water Bills (May 16, 2017), http://www.naacpldf.org/files/about-us/Letter_to_Flint_City_Council_RE_Moratorium_on_Property_Liens.pdf. 304 Zahra Ahmad, Flint Mistakenly Sends Out 7,931 Water Lien Notices, MLive (May 8, 2019), https://www.mlive.com/ news/flint/2019/05/flint-mistakenly-sends-out-7931-water-lien-notices.html; Zahra Ahmad, Flint Using Shutoffs, Liens, and Payment Program to Ramp Up Water Collection, MLive, (May 17, 2018), https://www.mlive.com/news/flint/2018/05/city_ramping_up_water_collecti.html; see also Randy Conat, Overdue Flint Water Bills Won’t Result in Property Tax Liens, ABC 12 (Jun. 29, 2017), http://www.abc12.com/content/news/Overdue-Flint-water-bills-wont-result-in-property-tax-liens-431629713.html. 84 85 305 Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 11; Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 34. 306 Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 12. 307 Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 750.383(a); see also Khalil AlHajal, Detroit to Crack Down on Unauthorized Water Re-connections During 15-Day Pause in Cutoffs, The Detroit News (Jul. 21, 2014), https://www.mlive.com/news/detroit/index.ssf/2014/07/ detroit_to_crack_down_on_unaut.html. 308 Balt. City Code, Art. 24, §§ 21-4, 21-6, 21-12, http://ca.baltimorecity.gov/codes/Art%2024%20-%20Water.pdf. 309 Ala. Code § 22-26-1. 310 See 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 8621-8630; see also Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 19. 311 Wong et al., supra note 205, at 12; Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 63; Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 16. 312 33 U.S.C.A. § 1284(b)(1); 42 U.S.C.A § 300g-4; 40 C.F.R. § 35.2140(i)(1). 313 Emily Allshouse, Federal Legislation Introduced to Ensure Access to Affordable Clean Water for Working Families, Ass’n of Cal. Water Agencies (Jun. 8, 2018), https://www.acwa.com/news/federal-legislation-introduced-to-ensure-access-to-affordable-clean-water-for-working-families/. 314 Id. 315 Food & Water Watch, Water. Jobs. Justice.: The Case for the Water Affordability, Transparency, Equity and Reliability (WATER) Act (2018), https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/sites/default/files/fs_1803_waterjobsjustice-wateractupd_web.pdf. Memorandum from Nancy Stone and Cynthia Giles to Regional Administrators et al., Assessing Financial Capability for 316 Municipal Clean Water Act Requirements (Jan. 13, 2013), https://www3.epa.gov/npdes/pubs/sw_regionalmemo.pdf. 317 Id. at 2-3. 318 Memorandum from Ken Kopocis, Deputy Ass’t Administrator Office of Water & Cynthia Giles, Ass’t Administrator, Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance to Regional Administrators, Regional Water Div. Directors & Regional Enforcement Div. Directors, 1 (Nov. 24, 2014), https://www.nacwa.org/docs/default-source/issues-in-depth/2014-11-26fin-capability.pdf?sfvrsn=10. 319 Id. 320 Id. 321 Community Affordability, supra note 222, at 47. 322 Id. 323 Id. at 62. 324 Brett Walton, Panel Recommends Changes to Two-Decade-Old EPA Water Affordability Guidelines, Circle of Blue (Nov. 28, 2017), https://www.circleofblue.org/2017/world/panel-recommends-changes-two-decade-old-epa-water-affordability-guidelines/. 325 Id. 326 Id. 327 Id. 328 See Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 40. 329 Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256, at 12; Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 93. 330 See generally Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256. 331 Id. at 60. 332 Id. at 29-30. 333 Janice Beecher et al., City of Detroit, Final Report 12 (Feb. 3, 2016), http://www.detroitmi.gov/Portals/0/docs/DWSD/ BRPA%20Final%20Report%20(incl%20Transmittal%20and%20App).pdf?ver=2016-03-07-092812-797 (citing Bolt v. City of Lansing, 587 N.W. 2d 264 (Mich. 1998)); see also Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256, at 64. 334 Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256, at 30; Nat’l Consumer Law Ctr., Access to Utility Service, § 12.1 (6th ed. 2018) [hereinafter Access to Utility Service]. 335 Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256, at 132; see also City of Detroit, How Do I Keep My Water Flowing?, https:// detroitmi.gov/departments/water-and-sewerage-department/bill-assistance-and-credits/how-do-i-keep-my-water-flowing (last visited May 27, 2019). 336 2018 State of Water Industry, supra note 211, at 19. 337 Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at ES-9. 338 Wong et al., supra note 205, at 12-15; Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 51. 339 Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 54. 340 Id. at 56. 341 Id. at 45. 342 Id. at 46. 343 Id. at 73. 344 Brett Walton, Water Affordability is a New Civil Rights Movement in the United States, Circle of Blue (Mar. 22, 2016), http://www.circleofblue.org/2016/water-policy-politics/water-rights-access/water-affordability-new-civil-rights-movement-united-states/. 345 Id. 346 Id. 347 Zamudio & Craft, supra note 300. 348 Butts & Gasteyer, supra note 202, at 392. 349 Mack & Wrase, supra note 231, at 5. 350 We the People of Detroit, Mapping the Water Crisis, http://wethepeopleofdetroit.com/communityresearch/water/ (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 351 Kimberly Foltz-Diaz, Patrick Kelleher-Calnan & Suren Moodliar, Massachusetts Global Action, The Color of Water: A Report on the Human Right to Water in the City of Boston (2012), http://massglobalaction.org/projects/colorofwater/primary_report_shutoffs_pre-pub.pdf. 352 Id. at 5. 353 Id. at 1. 354 Office of the High Comm’r for Civ. Rights, U.N., General Comment No. 15: The Right to Water, U.N. Doc. E/C.12/2002/11 (Jan. 20, 2003), http://www.refworld.org/pdfid/4538838d11.pdf. 355 Id. at 1. 356 Id. at 5-6. 357 El Hadji Guissé (Special Rapporteur on the Right to Drinking Water), Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights: Realization of the Right to Drinking Water and Sanitation, U.N. Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/2005/25 (Jul. 11, 2005), https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Water/SUb_Com_Guisse_guidelines.pdf. 358 Id. 359 Hum. Rts. Council, Annual Report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and Reports of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Secretary-General: Report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on the Scope and Content of the Relevant Human Rights Obligations Related to Equitable Access to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation under International Human Rights Instruments, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/6/3 (Aug. 16, 2007), http:// undocs.org/A/HRC/6/3. 360 Id. at 26. 361 Office of the High Comm’r, U.N. Hum. Rts., Overview of the Mandate, https://www.ohchr.org/en/issues/waterandsanitation/srwater/pages/overview.aspx (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 362 Office of the High Comm’r, U.N. Hum. Rts., USA: From Discrimination to Accessibility, UN Expert Raises Questions on Water and Sanitation, https://newsarchive.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=10808&LangID=E (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 363 U.S. Mission Geneva, U.S. Statement at the HRC Dialogue on the Right to Drinking Water and Sanitation, UN Human Rights Council, 18th Sess., Geneva (Sept. 15, 2011), https://geneva.usmission.gov/2011/09/15/u-s-statement-at-the-hrc-dialogue-on-the-right-to-drinking-water-and-sanitation/; Catarina de Albuquerque (Special Rapporteur on the Human Right to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation), Addendum, Mission to the United States of America U.N. Doc. A/HRC/18/33/Add.4 (Aug. 2, 2011), http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/18session/A-HRC-18-33-Add4_en.pdf; see also Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 37. 364 See U.N. Dep’t of Econ. & Soc. Affairs, The Human Right to Water and Sanitation, http://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/human_right_to_water.shtml (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 365 Id. 366 Calif. Water Bds., State Water Res. Control Bd., Human Right to Water Portal, https://www.waterboards.ca.gov/water_issues/programs/hr2w/ (last updated Feb. 8, 2019). 367 Cal. Water Code § 106.3. 368 Human Rights Council Res. 18/1, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/RES/18/33 (Sept. 28, 2011); G.A. Res. 64/292, The Human Right to Water and Sanitation (Aug. 3, 2010), https://www.un.org/en/ga/search/view_doc.asp?symbol=A/RES/64/292. 369 G.A. Res. 70/169, ¶1, The Human Rights to Safe Drinking Water and Sanitation (Dec. 17, 2015). 370 Matthew Lee & Josh Lederman, Trump Administration Pulls US out of UN Human Rights Council, Associated Press (Jun. 19, 2018), https://apnews.com/9c5b1005f064474f9a0825ab84a16e91. 371 Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at ES-4; Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 1, 4. 372 Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at ES-4. And bills for some families may be even higher. As demonstrated by Table 1, the average annual water bill in 2018 for a family of four in Baltimore using 150 gallons per person per day is around $950. Walton, Price of Water 2018, supra note 209. 373 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 3; see also Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, DPW Requests Hearing to Review Water/Sewer Adjustments, New Rate Structure (Jul. 26, 2016), https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/news/press-releases/2016-07-26-dpw-requests-hearing-review-watersewer-rate-adjustments-new-rate. 86 87 374 Carley Milligan, City to Raise Water Rates by 30 Percent over Three Years, Balt. Bus. J. (Jan. 9, 2019), https://www.bizjournals.com/baltimore/news/2019/01/09/city-to-raise-water-rates-by-30-percent-over-three.html. 375 Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at ES-4, 12-13. 376 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 2 (citing Timothy B. Wheeler, Decaying Water System Needs Makeover, Balt. Sun (Jul. 21, 2012), https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/environment/bs-xpm-2012-07-21-bs-gr-watersystem-aging-20120720-story.html). 377 Id. at 1. 378 Complaint at ¶¶26, 29, United States and State of Maryland v. Baltimore County, Maryland, No. 1:05-cv-02028 (D. Md. Jul. 26, 2005); Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 2; Mark Reutter, City Doubles its Debt Limit to $4.5 Billion for Water and Sewer Upgrades, Balt. Brew (Sept. 23, 2014), https://www.baltimorebrew.com/2014/09/23/city-doubles-itsbonded-debt-to-4-5-billion-for-water-and-sewer-systems/. 379 Consent Decree, United States and State of Maryland v. Baltimore County, Maryland, No. 1:05-cv-02028 (D. Md. Sept. 21, 2005), https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2013-09/documents/baltimoreco072605-cd.pdf. 380 Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at ES-3. 381 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 2 (citing Scott Dance, Sewage Spoiling Thousands of City Basements, but Another Decade of Repairs Looms, Balt. Sun (May 14, 2016), https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/investigations/bs-md-sewer-backups-20160514-story.html). City of Balt., Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, Year Ended June 30, 2016 80 (2016), https://finance.baltimorec382 ity.gov/sites/default/files/finance_baltimorecity_gov/attachments/BC-CAFR%202016%20072317_0.pdf. 383 Community Affordability, supra note 222, at 75-76. 384 Lillian Reed, EPA Issues Baltimore $202 Million Loan to Help Repair Wastewater System, Balt. Sun (Feb. 26, 2019), https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/environment/bs-md-ci-epa-loan-20190225-story.html. 385 See Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256, at 60. 386 Id. (citing Md. Code Ann., Local Gov’t § 5-205). 387 Balt. City Code, Art. 24, § 3-1; Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Rates and Fees Overview, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/pw-bureaus/water-wastewater/services/overview (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 388 Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, New Water Billing System, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/new-water-billing-system (last visited Mar. 26, 2019) [hereinafter New Water Billing System]; see also Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 2-3. 389 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 3. 390 Id. at 3. 391 Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Understanding Your Water Bill, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/Understanding-Your-Water-Bill (last visited May 8, 2019). 392 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 3. 393 New Water Billing System, supra note 388. 394 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 2; Julie Scharper & Luke Broadwater, City Issuing $4.2 Million in Refunds for Faulty Water Bills, Balt. Sun (Feb. 22, 2012), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/breaking/bs-md-ci-water-audit20120222-story.html. 395 See Luke Broadwater, Audit of Baltimore Finances Shows ‘Significant Deficiencies’ in Water Billing, Handling of Grant Money, Balt. Sun (Sept. 23, 2016), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/sun-investigates/bs-md-sun-investigates-audit-20160923-story.html. 396 Luke Broadwater, When the Water Bill is $50,000: Hundreds of Baltimore Customers Hit with Incorrect Bills, Balt. Sun (Feb. 8, 2018), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-city/bs-md-ci-water-bill-errors-20180208-story.html. 397 Yvonne Wenger, Clarke Wants Hearings Restored for Water Bill Disputes, Balt. Sun (Jul. 14, 2017), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-city/bs-md-ci-water-billing-conferences-20170714-story.html [hereinafter Wenger, Clarke Wants Hearings]; Yvonne Wenger, Advocates Decry Loss of Appeal Hearings in Baltimore Water Billing Disputes, Balt. Sun (Feb. 23, 2017), https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-city/bs-md-ci-water-billing-20170223-story.html [hereinafter Wenger, Advocates Decry Loss]. 398 Wenger, Clarke Wants Hearings, supra note 397. See also Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Water and Sewer Adjustment Form, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/water-and-sewer-adjustment-request-form (last visited Mar. 26, 2019) [hereinafter Water and Sewer Adjustment Request Form]. 399 Water and Sewer Adjustment Request Form, supra note 398. 400 Id. 401 Id. 402 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 1. 403 Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at ES-6. 404 Id. at ES-7. 405 Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Low Income Water Bill Assistance Program, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/ low-income-water-bill-assistance-program (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 406 Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Hardship Exemption Program, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/hardship-exemption-program (last visited Mar. 26, 2019); Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Medical Exemption Program, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/medical-exemption-program (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 407 Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Senior Citizen Water Bill Assistance Program, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/ senior-citizen-water-bill-assistance-program (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 408 Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Water Bill Payment Plan Program, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/water-bill-payment-plan-program (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 409 Id. 410 Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Rate Adjustment Request, Improved Assistance Program, https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/rate-adjustment-request-improved-assistance-program (last visited Mar. 26, 2019). 411 Id. 412 U.S. Census Bureau, QuickFacts: Baltimore City, Maryland (Jul. 1, 2017), https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/baltimorecitymaryland/PST045217. 413 Id. 414 Id. Demographer Bill Cooper conducted these analyses for LDF based on the data provided in Roger Colton’s report. See 415 generally Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279. 416 Balt. City Code, Art. 24, § 2-3; see also Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note at 269, at 9. 417 Food & Water Watch, Baltimore Must Stop Household Water Shutoffs: An Analysis of Key Facts, Figures, and Trends (Apr. 23, 2015), https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/sites/default/files/baltimore_water_shutoff_analysis.pdf. 418 Luke Broadwater, Baltimore to Send Water Turn-off Notices to 25,000 Delinquent Customers, Balt. Sun (Mar. 26, 2015), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-city/bs-md-ci-water-bills-20150326-story.html [hereinafter Broadwater, Water Turn-Off Notices]. 419 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 9. 420 Id. 421 John Wisely, Detroit Not Alone in Shutting Off Water for Unpaid Bills, USA Today (Jul. 27, 2014), https://www.usatoday. com/story/news/nation/2014/07/27/detroit-not-alone-in-shutting-off-water-for-unpaid-bills/13228207/. 422 Broadwater, Water Turn-Off Notices, supra note 427. 423 Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 9-10. 424 Joan Jacobson, Abell Found., The Steep Price of Paying to Stay: Baltimore City’s Tax Sale, the Risks to Vulnerable Homeowners, and Strategies to Improve the Process 9 (Oct. 2014), https://www.abell.org/sites/default/files/publications/ec-taxsale1014.pdf [hereinafter Jacobson, Steep Price]. 425 Pat Loeb, City to Unveil New Plan to Help Low-Income Families Pay Water Bill, CBS Philly (Jun. 19, 2017), https://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2017/06/19/city-to-unveil-new-plan-to-help-low-income-families-pay-water-bill/. 426 Id.; Meir Rinde, After Months of Wrangling, a Boost in City Water Rates Will Take Effect in September, Whyy (Jul. 23, 2018), https://whyy.org/articles/after-months-of-wrangling-a-boost-in-city-water-rates-will-take-effect-in-september/. 427 Philadelphia Launches New, Income-Based, Tiered Assistance Program, Office of the Mayor, City of Phila. (Jun. 20, 2017), https://beta.phila.gov/press-releases/mayor/philadelphia-launches-new-income-based-tiered-assistance-program/. 428 Id. 429 Brett Walton, Philadelphia Water Rate Links Payments to Household Income, Circle of Blue (May 16, 2017), https://www. circleofblue.org/2017/water-management/pricing/philadelphia-water-rate-links-payments-household-income/. 430 Id. 431 Id. 432 Id. 433 Id. 434 Id. at 9, 27. 435 Md. Code. Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-801(d). 436 See, e.g., City of Balt., Tax Sale Information: Other City Liens, https://taxsale.baltimorecity.gov/other-city-liens (last visited Mar. 26, 2019) [hereinafter Other City Liens]. 437 Senator Adelaide Eckardt et al., Report of the Task Force to Study Tax Sales in Maryland 4 (Jan. 18, 2018), https://msa. maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc5300/sc5339/000113/022600/022602/20180151e.pdf. 438 Id. 439 Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 9; City of Balt., Tax Sale Information: Real Property Tax Bills, https://taxsale. baltimorecity.gov/real-property-tax-bills (last visited Mar. 26, 2019) [hereinafter Real Property Tax Bills]. 440 Real Property Tax Bills, supra note 439. 88 89 441 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. §§ 14-804, 14-808; see also Eckardt et al., supra note 437, at 3. 442 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-805; see also Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 9. 443 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-812. 444 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-811. 445 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-817(a)(2). 446 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. §§ 14-833, 14-817.1(a)(7)-(9); see also Eckardt et al., supra note 437, at 3-4. 447 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-817.1(a)(6). 448 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. §§ 14-827, 14-828, 14-817.1. If the owner redeems within four months and before a foreclosure action is filed, they are required to pay the total lien amount on the property at the time of sale, with interest; any taxes, interest, and penalties paid by the certificate owner; taxes, interest, and penalties accruing after the date of tax sale; attorneys’ fees for recording the certificate of sale; a title search fee, not to exceed $250; and reasonable attorneys’ fees, not to exceed $500. See Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-817.1(a)(7)-(8). The costs can increase if the owner waits to redeem until after a foreclosure action has been filed. In that situation, the owner must pay the total lien amount on the property at the time of sale, with interest; any taxes, interest, and penalties paid by the holder of the certificate for sale; any taxes, interest, and penalties accruing after the date of the tax sale; and attorneys’ fees and expenses. See id. at (a)(9). 449 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-820(a)(8)(i); Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 11. 450 Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 11. 451 Id. at 17. 452 Id. 453 See generally Balt. Tax Certificate Auction, Tax (Lien Certificate) Sale 2019 Frequently Asked Questions, https://www. bidbaltimore.com/main?unique_id=635DA7725F5E11E885255310CDE5C3E0&use_this=view_faqs (updated Jan. 4, 2019) [hereinafter Tax Lien FAQs]; see also Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 10. 454 Balt. City Code, Art. 24, § 1-2(c); see also Tax Lien FAQs, supra note 453; see also Other City Liens, supra note 436. 455 Md. Code Ann., Tax-Prop. § 14-849.1. 456 Yvonne Wenger & Michael Dresser, City Officials Welcome Passage of Bill to Limit Tax Sales, Balt. Sun (Apr. 9, 2015), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-city-tax-sales-20150409-story.html. 457 Id. 458 Tax Lien FAQs, supra note 453. 459 Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 16; Fred Schulte & June Arney, Small Unpaid Bills Put Residents at Risk, Balt. Sun (Mar. 25, 2007), http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/real-estate/bal-taxsale-small-032507-story.html. 460 Fred Schulte et al., The Other Foreclosure Menace, Huffington Post Investigative Fund (May 18, 2010), https://www. huffingtonpost.com/2010/05/18/the-other-foreclosure-men_n_579936.html. 461 Schulte & Arney, supra note 459. 462 Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 3. 463 Id. 464 Schulte & Arney, supra note 459. 465 Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 14. 466 Id. at 7. 467 Eckardt et al., supra note 437, at 5. 468 Id. 469 Id. 470 Brett Walton, Water Debt Not on the Menu in Baltimore’s Tax Sale Season, Circle of Blue (May 9, 2018), http://www.circleofblue.org/2018/world/water-debt-not-on-the-menu-in-baltimores-tax-sale-season/ [hereinafter Walton, Not on the Menu]. 471 S.B. 1098, 2018 Gen. Assemb., Reg. Sess. (Md. 2018). http://mgaleg.maryland.gov/2018RS/fnotes/bil_0008/ sb1098.pdf [hereinafter Senate Bill 1098]. 472 Id. 473 Id.; Yvonne Wenger, Coalition Calls for End to Tax Sales in Baltimore over Unpaid Water Bills, Balt. Sun (Jun. 1, 2017), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-city/politics/bs-md-ci-water-tax-sale-20170601-story.html. 474 Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 8 (noting that Baltimore’s tax sale process can lead to evictions, homelessness, and property vacancies and abandonment); see also Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at 1-2 (noting that Baltimore’s water affordability crisis will place more financial strain on the city as it must address homelessness and abandoned properties, among other issues). 475 Schulte & Arney, supra note 459. 476 Id. 477 Id. 478 Id. 479 Pro Bono Res. Ctr. of Md., Tax Sale Prevention Project, Baltimore Clinic Statistics 2017; Pro Bono Res. Ctr. of Md., Tax Sale Prevention Project, Baltimore Clinic Statistics 2016. 480 Pro Bono Res. Ctr. of Md., Tax Sale Prevention Project, Baltimore Clinic Statistics 2017; Pro Bono Res. Ctr. of Md., Tax Sale Prevention Project, Baltimore Clinic Statistics 2016. 481 Pro Bono Res. Ctr. of Md., Tax Sale Prevention Project, Baltimore Clinic Statistics 2017; Pro Bono Res. Ctr. of Md., Tax Sale Prevention Project, Baltimore Clinic Statistics 2016. 482 Mary Washington, Put an End to Water Bill Tax Sales, Balt. Sun (Jun. 23, 2017), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/ opinion/readersrespond/bs-ed-rr-water-bills-20170623-story.html. 483 Id. 484 Eckardt et al., supra note 437. 485 Id. at 4. 486 Id. 487 Id. at 6-9. 488 Id. at 8. 489 Id. at 9. 490 Balt. City Dep’t of Public Works, Water-Only Liens Not Subject to Tax Sale (Dec. 20, 2017), https://publicworks.baltimorecity.gov/news/press-releases/2017-12-20-water-only-liens-not-subject-tax-sale; Walton, Not on the Menu, supra note 470. 491 Walton, Not on the Menu, supra note 470. H.B. 1409, Baltimore City—Tax Sales of Real Property—Water Liens (Water Taxpayer Protection Act), (introduced Feb. 9, 492 2018), http://mgaleg.maryland.gov/2018RS/bills/hb/hb1409f.pdf; see also Walton, Not on the Menu, supra note 470. 493 Ethan McLeod, With Time Waning, Legislators Stall on Proposal to Ban Water Lien Tax Sales in Baltimore, Balt. Fishbowl (Apr. 3, 2018), https://baltimorefishbowl.com/stories/with-time-waning-legislators-stall-on-proposal-to-ban-water-lien-tax-salesin-baltimore/. 494 Scott Dance, Measure to Halt Tax Sales of Baltimore Homes for Unpaid Water Bills Passes as 2018 Session Ends, Balt. Sun (Apr. 9, 2018), https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-water-tax-liens-20180409-story.html; Walton, Not on the Menu, supra note 470. 495 Senate Bill 1098, supra note 471; see also Walton, Not on the Menu, supra note 470. 496 City of Balt., Council Bill 18-0307, Water Accountability and Equity Act (Dec. 3, 2018), https://baltimore.legistar.com/LegislationDetail.aspx?ID=3769175&GUID=4A3F24AF-7CC7-442B-86C5-B01AF0A148F7&Options=ID Text &Search=18-0307. 497 Id. at §§ 2-6 through 2-15. 498 Id. at § 4-3. 499 Id. at § 2-17. 500 Id. 501 Id. at § 2-21. 502 Id. 503 Legislation Details for the Water Accountability and Equity Act, Balt. City Council, https://baltimore.legistar.com/LegislationDetail.aspx?ID=3769175&GUID=4A3F24AF-7CC7-442B-86C5-B01AF0A148F7&Options=ID Text &Search=18-0307 (last updated Apr. 15, 2019). 504 S.B. 96, 2019 Md. Gen. Assemb., Reg. Sess. (Md. 2019), Water Taxpayer Protection Act of 2019, http://mgaleg.maryland.gov/2019RS/bills/sb/sb0096F.pdf; see also Luke Broadwater, Baltimore Lawmakers Seek to Ban City from Placing Liens Against Properties over Water Debt, Balt. Sun (Jan. 7, 2019), https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-taxsale-legislation-20190107-story,amp.html [hereinafter Broadwater, Baltimore Lawmakers]. S.B. 96 was cross-filed with House Bill 0161, introduced by Delegate Nick Mosby. H.B. 161, 2019 Md. Gen. Assemb., Reg. Sess. (Md. 2019), http://mgaleg.maryland. gov/webmga/frmMain.aspx?pid=billpage&tab=subject3&id=hb0161&stab=01&ys=2019RS (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 505 Broadwater, Baltimore Lawmakers, supra note 504. 506 NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., LDF Supports Bill to Permanently Protect Baltimore Communities from Losing Homes Due to Water Debt (Jan. 30, 2019), https://www.naacpldf.org/press-release/ldf-supports-bill-permanently-protect-baltimore-communities-losing-homes-due-water-debt/. 507 Luke Broadwater, Maryland General Assembly Passes Legislation Barring the Seizure of Baltimore Homes over Water Bills, Balt. Sun (Apr. 3, 2019), https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/politics/bs-md-ci-water-liens-passes-20190403story.html; Press Release, Governor of Maryland, Bills to be Signed by the Governor on April 30, 2019, https://governor.maryland. gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Press-Release-Abbreviated-Signed-April-30-2019.pdf. 508 City of Cleveland Water, Water Rates: Rates and Fees, www.clevelandwater.com/customer-service/water-rates/ratesfees (last visited May 8, 2019). 509 Id. 510 Id. 511 Id. 512 Id. 90 91 513 City of Cleveland Water, Water Rates: Monthly Billing, www.clevelandwater.com/monthly-billing (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 514 City of Cleveland Water, Proposed Cleveland Water Rates for the Next Five Years (Oct. 19, 2015), http://www.clevelandwater.com/blog/rates [hereinafter Proposed Cleveland Water Rates]; Thomas Ott, Cleveland City Council Raises Water Rates in 10-8 Vote, Cleveland.com (May 24, 2011), http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2011/05/cleveland_council_approves_wat. html. 515 Elizabeth Miller, As Rates Rise, Cleveland Water and Sewer Grapples with Affordability, ideastream (Feb. 8, 2019), https://www.ideastream.org/news/as-rates-rise-cleveland-water-and-sewer-grapples-with-affordability. 516 Proposed Cleveland Water Rates, supra note 514. 517 Id. 518 Ne. Ohio Reg’l Sewer Dist., Wastewater Rates and Stormwater Fees, https://www.neorsd.org/customers-service-page/ sewer-rates-and-stormwater-fees/ (last visited May 8, 2019). 519 Id. 520 Id. 521 Terry Brlas, Sewer Rates on the Rise, Royalton Post (Jun. 8, 2011), http://www.thepostnewspapers.com/north_royalton/ local_news/sewer-rates-on-the-rise/article_ae4ded96-4914-52eb-a1fd-7885776c43b3.html. 522 James F. McCarty, NE Ohio Monthly Sewer Bills to Rise—A 41 Percent Hike Over the Next Five Years, Cleveland.com (Aug. 4, 2016), https://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2016/08/ne_ohio_sewer_bills_to_increas.html. Ne. Ohio Reg’l Sewer Dist., Wastewater Rates and Stormwater Fees: 2016-2021 Rate Schedule, https://www.neorsd. 523 org/customers-service-page/sewer-rates-and-stormwater-fees/ (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 524 Id. 525 All. for the Great Lakes, Cleveland Residents Share Concerns, Get Answers at Water Affordability Clinic (May 18, 2018), https://greatlakes.org/2018/05/cleveland-residents-share-concerns-get-answers-at-water-affordability-clinic/ [hereinafter Cleveland Residents Share Concerns]. 526 Proposed Cleveland Water Rates, supra note 514. 527 Id.; McCarty, supra note 522. 528 Miller, supra note 515. 529 Cleveland Residents Share Concerns, supra note 525. 530 City of Cleveland Water, Water Rates: Discount Programs, http://www.clevelandwater.com/customer-service/water-rates/discount-programs (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 531 Id. 532 Id. 533 Id. 534 Id. 535 Ne. Ohio Reg’l Sewer Dist., Cost-Saving Programs, https://www.neorsd.org/customers-service-page/cost-saving-program-new/#Affordability (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 536 Amended Consent Decree, Colegrove v. City of Cleveland, et al., No. 74-1007 (N.D. Ohio Jun. 25, 1987). 537 Id. at 2. 538 Id. at 1. 539 Id. 540 Cleveland requires renters who wish to pay their own water bills to visit their offices in person to show a copy of the lease agreement and pay a deposit. City of Cleveland Water, FAQs, http://www.clevelandwater.com/customer-service/faq (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 541 City of Cleveland, Water Review Board, http://www.clevelandwater.com/water-review-board (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 542 City of Cleveland Water, Straight from the Tap: What You Can Expect from the Water Review Board (Mar. 10, 2017), http://www.clevelandwater.com/blog/what-you-can-expect-water-review-board. 543 Ron Regan, Jonathan Walsh, Samah Assad & Joe Pagonakis, Drowning in Dysfunction: How the Cleveland Water Department is Failing its Community, Violating Rights, News 5 Cleveland (Dec. 22, 2016), https://www.news5cleveland.com/longform/ drowning-in-dysfunction-how-the-cleveland-water-dept-is-failing-its-community-violating-rights [hereinafter Regan et al., Drowning in Dysfunction]; Ron Regan, Thousands of Cleveland Water Customers at Risk of Losing Home Due to Water Department Tactics, News 5 Cleveland (updated Dec. 20, 2016), https://www.news5cleveland.com/mobile-showcase/thousands-of-cle-water-customers-at-risk-of-losing-home-due-to-water-department-tactics [hereinafter Regan, Tactics]. 544 Regan et al., Drowning in Dysfunction, supra note 543. 545 Id. 546 Id. 547 Ron Regan, Cleveland Water Customers Could Face Higher Bills Due to Critical Meter Installation Error, News 5 Cleve- land (updated Feb. 16, 2017), https://www.news5cleveland.com/news/local-news/investigations/cleveland-water-customers-could-face-higher-bills-due-to-critical-meter-installation-error [hereinafter Regan, Meter Installation Error]. 548 Id. 549 Id. 550 Regan et al., Drowning in Dysfunction, supra note 543. 551 Id. 552 Id. 553 Id. 554 Id. 555 Regan, Meter Installation Error, supra note 547. 556 Regan et al., Drowning in Dysfunction, supra note 543. 557 Miller, supra note 515. 558 Regan et al., Drowning in Dysfunction, supra note 543; Regan, Tactics, supra note 543. 559 City of Cleveland Water, Controlling Costs for All Cleveland Water Customers (Jan. 26, 2017), http://www.clevelandwater.com/blog/controlling-costs-all-cleveland-water-customers [hereinafter Controlling Costs]. 560 Id. 561 Id. 562 Id. 563 Regan et al., Drowning in Dysfunction, supra note 543. 564 Id. 565 Ron Regan, Cleveland Water Department Cover-up Fails to Disclose Serious Billing Errors, News 5 Cleveland (Feb. 22, 2017), https://www.news5cleveland.com/news/local-news/investigations/cle-water-dept-cover-up-fails-to-disclose-seriousbilling-errors. 566 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §§ 743.04, 6103.02; see also Ohio Admin. Code Ann. § 4901:1-15-27. 567 Controlling Costs, supra note 559; see also Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §§ 743.04, 6103.02. 568 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §§ 743.04, 6103.02. 569 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5721.18. 570 Id. 571 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5721.19. 572 Id. 573 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5721.25. 574 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5721.31. 575 Id. 576 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5721.32. 577 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5721.38. 578 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5721.39. 579 Id. 580 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §§ 5721.39, 5721.20. 581 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 5721.20. 582 U.S. Census Bureau, QuickFacts: Cuyahoga County, Ohio (Jul. 1, 2017), https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/cuyahogacountyohio/PST045217 [hereinafter QuickFacts: Cuyahoga County]. 583 Id. 584 U.S. Census Bureau, QuickFacts: Cleveland City, Ohio (Jul. 1, 2017), https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/ clevelandcityohio/PST045217. 585 Id. 586 Id.; QuickFacts: Cuyahoga County, Ohio, supra note 582. 587 Demographer Bill Cooper conducted these analyses based on publicly-available data provided to LDF by Cuyahoga County. 588 For each year, the remainder of the liens were located in majority-minority (but not majority-Black) census tracts. 589 U.S. Census Bureau, American Housing Survey 2013 National Summary Tables, at Table C-04-AO, https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/ahs/data/2013/ahs-2013-summary-tables/national-summary-report-and-tables---ahs-2013.html (last visited Mar. 27, 2019) [hereinafter American Housing Survey 2013]; U.S. Census Bureau, ACS Demographic and Housing Estimates, 2010-2014 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, American FactFinder, https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/ tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?src=bkmk (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 590 American Housing Survey 2013, supra note 589, at Table C-04-AO. 591 U.S. Census Bureau, 2013 American Housing Survey: Plumbing, Water, and Sewage Disposal, https://factfinder.census. gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?src=bkmk (last visited Mar. 27, 2019); see also Inga T. Winkler & Catherine 92 93 Coleman Flowers, ‘America’s Dirty Secret’: The Human Right to Sanitation in Alabama’s Black Belt, 49 Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 181, 187 (2017). 592 See, e.g., Winkler & Coleman Flowers, supra note 591, at 190. 593 James VanDerslice, Drinking Water Infrastructure and Environmental Disparities: Evidence and Methodological Considerations, 101 Supp. 1 Am. J. Pub. Health No. S1, S113 (2011), https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21836110. 594 See Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 58. 595 Id. at 58-59. 596 U.S. Census Bureau, QuickFacts: Alabama (Jul. 1, 2017), https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/al/PST045217. 597 Winkler & Coleman Flowers, supra note 591, at 189. 598 Id. at 190. 599 Ashley Cleek, Filthy Water and Shoddy Sewers Plague Poor Black Belt Counties, Aljazeera Am. (Jun. 3, 2015), http:// america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/6/3/filthy-water-and-poor-sewers-plague-poor-black-belt-counties.html; see also Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 14-15. 600 Winkler & Coleman Flowers, supra note 591, at 185, 188-89. 601 Catherine Flowers, A County Where the Sewer is Your Lawn, N.Y. Times (May 22, 2018), https://www.nytimes. com/2018/05/22/opinion/alabama-poverty-sewers.html. 602 Winkler & Coleman Flowers, supra note 591, at 188, 191 (citing Ala. Code § 22-26-1). 603 Id. 604 Id. The state apparently no longer follows this practice. Id. (citing Cleek, supra note 695). 605 Flowers, supra note 601. 606 Winkler & Coleman Flowers, supra note 591, at 198. 607 Id. 608 VanDerslice, supra note 593. 609 Stephanie Schmidt, Puerto Rico After Maria: ‘Water is Everything,’ Wash. Post (Sept. 12, 2018), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/national/wp/2018/09/12/feature/water-is-everything-but-for-many-in-puerto-rico-it-is-still-scarce/?utm_term=.6589435fd904. 610 Lichter, supra note 126; Allan Parnell et al., Cedar Grove Institute for Sustainable Communities, The Persistence of Political Segregation: Racial Underbounding in North Carolina 3 (Oct. 24, 2004), http://www.cedargroveinst.org/files/regional_underbounding.pdf. 611 Lichter, supra note 126, at 3. 612 Id. 613 Id.; Parnell et al., supra note 610, at 3. 614 Lichter, supra note 126, at 4; Parnell et al., supra note 610, at 18. 615 Hannah Gordon Leker & Jacqueline MacDonald Gibson, Relationship Between Race and Community Water and Sewer Service in North Carolina, USA, PLoS One 13(3): e0193225 (Mar. 21, 2018), http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/ journal.pone.0193225. 616 Id. at 1-2. 617 Id. at 9. 618 Kristi Pullen Fedinick et al., Nat. Res. Def. Council, Threats on Tap: Widespread Violations Highlight Need for Investment in Water Infrastructure and Protections 1 (May 2017), https://assets.nrdc.org/sites/default/files/threats-on-tap-water-infrastructure-protections-report.pdf?_ga=2.64391212.2044887536.1527776525-1196270886.1525810251. 619 Id. 620 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 57. 621 Id. 622 Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 8. 623 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 58; Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 9. 624 Declining Populations, supra note 111, at 9. 625 Matthew M. Davis et al., State of Michigan, Flint Water Advisory Task Force Final Report 23 (Mar. 21, 2016), https:// www.michigan.gov/documents/snyder/FWATF_FINAL_REPORT_21March2016_517805_7.pdf. 626 Id. 627 Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 57. 628 David Switzer & Manuel P. Teodoro, Class, Race, Ethnicity, and Justice in Safe Drinking Water Compliance, 99 Soc. Sci. Quarterly 9-11 (Mar. 23, 2017), https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/ssqu.12397. 629 See, e.g., Food & Water Watch, Water Injustice: Economic and Racial Disparities in Access to Safe and Clean Water in the United States 2 (Mar. 16, 2017), https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/insight/water-injustice-economic-and-racial-disparities-access-safe-and-clean-water-united-states [hereinafter Water Injustice]. 630 Robert Jones et al., Trends in Blood Lead Levels and Blood Lead Testing Among U.S. Children Aged 1 to 5 Years, 1988- 2004, 123 Pediatrics (Apr. 2009), http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/123/3/e376?download=true. 631 Water Injustice, supra note 629, at 2 (citing Rebecca Renner, Out of Plumb: When Water Treatment Causes Lead Contamination, 117 Envt’l Health Perspectives, No. 12, A 544 (Dec. 2009)). 632 Milwaukee’s Slow Response to Troubling Lead Level Report Sparks Outrage, CBS News (Mar. 30, 2018), https://www. cbsnews.com/news/milwaukee-parents-concerned-lead-levels-after-troubling-report/. 633 Id. 634 Nidhi Subbaraman, Detroit Is Shutting Off Drinking Water To All Schools Due To Concerns About Lead, BuzzFeed News (Aug. 30, 2018), https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/nidhisubbaraman/detroit-schools-lead-drinking-water?bftwnews&utm_term=4ldqpgc#4ldqpgc. 635 Dana Afana, Water Coolers Replace Drinking Fountains at Detroit Schools After Lead Detected, MLive (Sept. 4, 2018), https://www.mlive.com/news/detroit/index.ssf/2018/09/water_coolers_replace_detroit.html. 636 Rebecca Hersher, Contaminated Water in St. Joseph, La., Leads to Public Health Emergency, NPR (Dec. 16, 2016), https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/12/16/505910732/contaminated-water-in-st-joseph-la-leads-to-publichealth-emergency. 637 Julie Dermansky, While One Louisiana Town’s Lead-Tainted Water System is Replaced, Dozens of Others Deteriorate, Desmog (Mar. 18, 2017), https://www.desmogblog.com/2017/03/18/st-joseph-louisiana-lead-tainted-water-system-replaced-dozens-deteriorate; Brady Dennis, This Louisiana Town Has a Serious Problem with Lead in Its Water. It Won’t Be the Only One This Year, Wash. Post (Jan. 6, 2017), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2017/01/06/thislouisiana-town-has-a-serious-problem-with-lead-in-its-water-it-wont-be-the-only-one-this-year/?utm_term=.780203c84c63. Mark Ballard, St. Joseph Water Crisis Nears an End, Now Residents Have to Figure Out How to Pay for Its Solution, The Ad638 vocate (Nov. 24, 2017), http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/politics/article_575ecc7c-d173-11e7-a4c7-0b90e0fce59c.html. 639 Id. 640 U.S. Census Bureau, QuickFacts: Flint City, MI (Jul. 1, 2017), https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/flintcitymichigan/PST045217. 641 Kayla Platoff, Why Are Minority Communities Losing Their Water Access?, Study Breaks (Mar. 2, 2018), https://studybreaks.com/news-politics/water-insecurity-2/. 642 Davis et al., supra note 625, at 16-17. 643 Id. at 18-21. 644 Irwin Redlener, We Still Haven’t Made Things Right in Flint, Wash. Post (Mar. 7, 2018), https://www.washingtonpost. com/opinions/we-still-havent-made-things-right-in-flint/2018/03/07/5c700692-2211-11e8-badd-7c9f29a55815_story.html?utm_term=.0d6bd0fb2414. 645 Davis et al., supra note 625, at 24. 646 Id. at 25. 647 Id. at 15, 21. 648 Kristen Jordan Shamus, How Race, Class Set the Stage for Flint Water Crisis, Detroit Free Press (Mar. 23, 2016), https:// www.freep.com/story/news/2016/03/23/race-class-flint-water-crisis/80875256/. 649 Davis et al., supra note 625, at 54. 650 Toni M. Massaro & Ellen Elizabeth Brooks, Flint of Outrage, 93 Notre Dame L. Rev. 155, 157 (Nov. 2017). 651 Boler v. Early/Mays v. Snyder, 865 F.3d 391, 399 (6th Cir. 2017). 652 Massaro & Brooks, supra note 650, at 157. 653 Id. 654 Id. at 173 (citing Michigan, Gov. Snyder, Andy Dillon & Nick Lyon’s Brief in Support of Motion to Dismiss at 1, Mays v. Snyder, No. 15-cv-14002, 2017 WL 445637 (E.D. Mich. Nov 13, 2015)). 655 Boler, 865 F.3d at 396. 656 Id. at 409. 657 Waid et al. v. Snyder et. al, No. 5:16-CV-10444 (E.D. Mich. filed Feb. 8, 2016). 658 Opinion & Order Granting in Part & Denying in Part Busch, Cook, Prysby, Rosenthal, Shekter-Smith, Ambrose, Croft, Earley, Flint, Glasgow, Johnson, Walling, Wright, Dillon, Lyon, MDHHS, Governor Snyder, Michigan, & Wurfel’s Motions to Dismiss, Granting in Part & Denying in Part Veolia’s Partial Motion to Dismiss, Granting Lan’s Partial Motions to Dismiss, Denying Lan’s Motion for a More Definite Statement, & Granting Wyant & Peeler’s Motions to Dismiss, In re Flint Water Cases, Case No. 16-cv-10444 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 1, 2018). 659 Guertin v. Michigan et al., Nos. 17-1698/1699/1745/1752/1769, at 4, 10-12 (6th Cir. 2019). 660 Leonard N. Fleming, Flint: Water Line Replacement Won’t Be Done Till 2019, The Detroit News (Dec. 4, 2018), https:// www.detroitnews.com/story/news/michigan/flint-water-crisis/2018/12/04/state-shrugs-flint-pipe-replacement-workahead/2204132002/; see also Redlener, supra note 644. 661 Brian Barrett, The Flint Water Crisis is Bigger than Elon Musk, Wired (Jul. 12, 2018), https://www.wired.com/story/elonmusk-flint-water-plan/. 94 95 662 Id.; Michigan.gov, Get Free Water Filters at These Five Locations, https://www.michigan.gov/flintwater/0,6092,7-345-73954-366279--,00.html (last visited Apr. 17, 2019). 663 Barrett, supra note 661. 664 Elaine S. Povich, Where Unpaid Water Bills Can Mean Losing a Home, Pew (Mar. 4, 2019), https://www.pewtrusts.org/ en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2019/03/04/where-unpaid-water-bills-can-mean-losing-a-home. 665 Fishman, Big Thirst, supra note 118, at 301. 666 The structure of such a claim will be addressed in a forthcoming law review article. 667 U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. The Fifth Amendment uses the same language to describe the due process obligations of the federal government. U.S. Const. amend. V, § 1. Because we are concerned with state (and municipal) action, this discussion is limited to the 14th Amendment. 668 Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of the City of N.Y., 436 U.S. 658, 689 (1978); Bd. of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564, 580 (1972). 669 See Murthy, supra note 263, at 189-94; Martha F. Davis, Let Justice Roll Down: A Case Study of the Legal Infrastructure for Water Equality and Affordability, 23 Geo J. on Poverty L. & Pol’y 355, 371-73 (2016) (discussing a potential procedural due process claim to secure continued access to water and sewer services). 670 Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532, 541 (1985); Erwin Chemerinsky, Procedural Due Process Claims, 16 Touro L. Rev. 871, 871 (1999), https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1642&context=faculty_scholarship. 671 Roth, 408 U.S. at 577. 672 Memphis Light, Gas, and Water Div. v. Craft, 436 U.S. 1, 11-12 (1978). 673 Vitek v. Jones, 445 U.S. 480, 491 (1980). 674 Baldwin v. Hale, 68 U.S. 223, 233 (1863). 675 Armstrong v. Manzo, 380 U.S. 545, 552 (1965). 676 Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314 (1950). See Jones v. Flowers, 547 U.S. 164 (2006); Tulsa Prof’l Collection Servs., Inc. v. Pope, 485 U.S. 478 (1988); Menonite Bd. of Missions v. Adams, 462 U.S. 791 (1983); Greene v. Lindsey, 456 U.S. 444 (1982); Armstrong, 380 U.S. at 550. 677 Mullane, 339 U.S. at 314; Roller v. Holly, 176 U.S. 398 (1900). 678 424 U.S. 319, 334 (1976); see also Davis, supra note 669, at 372. 679 Mathews, 424 U.S. at 335. 680 See, e.g., Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 301-302 (1993); Collins v. Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 125 (1992); Daniels v. Williams, 474 U.S. 327, 331 (1986). 681 Moore v. City of East Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494, 503 (1977); see also Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U.S. 97 (1934). 682 Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1 (1967). 683 Skinner v. Oklahoma ex rel. Williamson, 316 U.S. 535 (1942). 684 Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965). 685 Eisenstadt v. Baird, 405 U.S. 438 (1972). 686 Rochin v. California, 342 U.S. 165 (1952). 687 Cruzan v. Director, Mo. Dep’t of Health, 497 U.S. 261 (1990). 688 Massaro & Brooks, supra note 650, at 183. 689 Rochin, 342 U.S. at 172. 690 Massaro & Brooks, supra note 650, at 197. 691 Id. at 179. 692 Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 720 (1997) (citing Collins, 503 U.S. at 125; Moore, 431 U.S. at 502). 693 Massaro & Brooks, supra note 650, at 157-58 (citing Jackson v. City of Joliet, 715 F.2d 1200, 1203-04 (7th Cir. 1983) (“The modern expansion of government has led to proposals for reinterpreting the Fourteenth Amendment to guarantee the provision of basic services such as education, poor relief, and, presumably, police protection . . . The Supreme Court has refused to go so far . . . .”)). 694 See Murthy, supra note 263, at 194-207; Davis, supra note 669, at 373-74. 695 436 U.S. at 11. 696 Id. at 4. 697 Id. at 5. 698 Id. at 13. 699 Id. 700 Id. at 13-14. 701 Id. at 3. 702 Id. at 5. 703 Id. 704 Id. at 7. 705 Id. 706 Id. at 11. 707 Id. at 11-12 (citation and internal quotation omitted). 708 Id. at 13 (citation omitted). 709 Id. at 14-15. 710 Id. at 18. 711 Id. 712 Id. at 20. 713 Id. at 22. 714 Mansfield Apartment Owners Ass’n v. City of Mansfield, 988 F.2d 1469, 1474 (6th Cir. 1993). 715 Id.; Palmer v. Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc., 479 F.2d 153, 165 (1973). 716 69 F. App’x 136, 138-39, 2014 WL 21436849, at *1-2 (4th Cir. 2003). 717 In re City of Detroit, Lyda v. City of Detroit, No. 13-53846, 2014 WL 6474081, at *2 (Bankr. Nov. 19, 2014). 718 Murthy, supra note 263, at 180 (citing Transcript of Hearing re Motion for Temporary Restraining Order filed by Plaintiffs & Motion to Dismiss Adversary Proceeding filed by Defendant at 12, In re City of Detroit, Lyda v. City of Detroit, No. 13-53846 (Bankr. E.D. Mich. Sept. 29, 2014) [hereinafter Transcript]). 719 Id. (citing Transcript, supra note 718, at 14-15). 720 Lyda, 2014 WL 6474081, at *2. 721 Murthy, supra note 263, at 178 (citing Transcript, supra note 718, at 5). 722 Id. at 180 (citing Transcript, supra note 718, at 12). 723 Id. (citing Transcript, supra note 718, at 14). 724 Id. (citing Transcript, supra note 718, at 15-16). 725 Id. at 180-83 (citing Transcript, supra note 718, at 16-24). 726 Lyda, 2014 WL 6474081, at *5 (citations omitted). 727 Id. at *7. 728 Id. at *8. 729 Id. 730 Id. 731 Id. 732 Id. 733 Id. (citing Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 141.21). 734 Id. 735 Lyda, 2015 WL 5461463, at *3. 736 Id. at *4. 737 In re City of Detroit, Lyda v. City of Detroit, 841 F.3d 684, 693 (6th Cir. 2016). 738 Id. at 693-94. 739 Id. at 694. 740 Id. at 702. 741 Id. at 699. 742 Id. at 700. 743 Id. 744 Id. 745 Memphis Light, 436 U.S. at 11-12. See also Opinion at 21, Mayor & City Council of Baltimore v. ISG Sparrows Point, LLC, No. 980 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. Nov. 4, 2011). 746 Ohio Admin. Code § 4901:1-15-27. 747 Balt. City Code, Art. 24, §§ 2-1(c), 2.3, 4.4. 748 See Murthy, supra note 263, at 188. 749 Amended Consent Decree, Colegrove, supra note 536, at 2. 750 Id. at 2-3. 751 See, e.g., Regan et al., Drowning in Dysfunction, supra note 543. 752 Wenger, Clarke Wants Hearings, supra note 397. 753 Id. 754 Balt. City Code, Art. 24, § 2-2. 755 Opinion, Sparrows Point, supra note 745, at 24. 756 Id. 757 Id. 758 Wenger, Advocates Decry Loss, supra note 397. 96 97 759 Lyda, 841 F.3d at 699 (citing Mansfield, 988 F.2d at 1477). 760 Dunbar v. City of New York, 251 U.S. 516, 519 (1920) (enforcing a lien against a landlord for the tenant’s delinquent water bills did not violate the landlord’s substantive due process rights); Lyda, 841 F.3d at 699; Chatham v. Jackson, 613 F.2d 73, 78-79 (5th Cir. 1980) (holding that Atlanta’s practice of terminating water service to the landlord when the tenant’s bills were delinquent did not violate substantive due process); Coshow v. City of Escondido, 34 Cal. Rptr. 3d 19, 30-31 (Cal. App. 4th 2005) (in a case challenging the fluoridation of drinking water, the court held that there is no constitutional right to drinking water of a certain quality or to water without the fluoridation agent); see also Murthy, supra note 263 at 195 n.258 (citing Mansfield, 988 F.2d at 1476-77 (“[W]e reject the claim that conditioning the receipt of water and sewer services on the satisfaction of past due charges for services rendered to the applicant’s residence raises the question of a substantive due process violation.”); Ransom v. Marrazzo, 848 F.2d 398, 411-12 (3d Cir. 1988) (disagreeing with the court’s finding in Roger v. Guarino, 412 F. Supp. 1375, 1386 (E.D. Pa. 1976), which had determined that the policy of requiring a tenant to pay a landlord’s delinquent water bills in order to avoid termination of water service violated substantive due process); In re Agent Orange Prods. Liab. Litig., 375 F. Supp. 305, 310 (N.D. Ohio 1974) (there is no constitutional right to a healthful environment or one free of toxic chemicals); Tanner v. Armco Steel Corp., 340 F. Supp. 532, 537 (S.D. Tex. 1971) (no constitutional right to a healthful environment)). 761 Mays, 2017 WL 445637, at *1. 762 841 F.3d at 700. 763 Id. (quoting Range v. Douglas, 763 F.3d 573, 588 n.6 (6th Cir. 2014) (“Most state-created rights that qualify for procedural due process protections do not rise to the level of substantive due process protection”)); see also McKinney v. Pate, 20 F.3d 1550, 1556 (11th Cir. 1994). Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 4905.22. 764 765 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 743.04(A). 766 Id. 767 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 4905.34. 768 While it is generally accepted that municipal utilities are state actors for constitutional due process purposes, private water companies are not. See Memphis Light, 436 U.S. at 7; Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 3.2.1. In Jackson v. Metro. Edison Co., an LDF case argued by second Director-Counsel Jack Greenberg, the Supreme Court held that state action is not present for purposes of the Due Process Clause when a utility is privately owned, even though the company is regulated by the state. 419 U.S. 345, 350-51 (1974). This is something to be mindful of given the recent trend back toward privatization of water services. 769 Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 743.27. 770 Md. Code Ann., Local Gov’t § 5-205. 771 Balt. City Code, Art. 24, § 3-5(a), (c). 772 Murthy, supra note 263, at 162. Professor Martha Davis also argues that there is a colorable substantive due process claim for access to water. Davis, supra note 669, at 373. 773 Murthy, supra note 263, at 161 (citing Cass R. Sunstein, The Second Bill of Rights: FDR’s Unfinished Revolution and Why We Need It More than Ever 61-62 (2004)). 774 Murthy, supra note 263, at 197; see also Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 11. 775 Murthy, supra note 263, at 198-99 (citing Atkins v. City of Chicago, 631 F.3d 823, 830 (7th Cir. 2011) (noting that “a thirsty person deprived of water would last [only] a matter of days”); Barker v. Goodrich, 649 F.3d 428, 434 (6th Cir. 2011) (finding that “for no legitimate penological purpose, [the inmate] was denied adequate access to water”); Battle v. Anderson, 564 F.2d 388, 395 (10th Cir. 1977) (“Water, fire protection, air, and food are necessities of life.”)). 776 See id. at 201-04; see also Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 34. 777 In examining the Flint litigation, Professor Toni Massaro and attorney Ellen Elizabeth Brooks noted that courts are unlikely to recognize a right to be free from contaminated water, given the prevalence of contaminants in the U.S. and the complexities of setting water quality standards. Massaro & Brooks, supra note 650, at 158. Recognizing a right to affordable water would arguably have even greater ramifications. 778 Finkelman, supra note 2, at 169, 175. 779 See Davis, supra note 669, at 374-76. 780 Section 1981 reads: “All persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall have the same right in every State and Territory to make and enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, give evidence, and to the full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings for the security of persons and property as is enjoyed by white citizens, and shall be subject to like punishment, pains, penalties, taxes, licenses, and exactions of every kind, and to no other.” 42 U.S.C. § 1981(a). Part (b) of the statute defines “making and enforcing contracts” as including “the making, performance, modification, and termination of contracts, and the enjoyment of all benefits, privileges, terms, and conditions of the contractual relationship.” Id. at (b). Courts have allowed claims challenging the discriminatory denial of municipal services to proceed under Section 1981. See Kennedy v. City of Zanesville, 505 F. Supp. 2d 456, 494 (S.D. Ohio 2007) (involving the discriminatory denial of water services). 781 Section 1982 reads: “All citizens of the United States shall have the same right, in every State and Territory, as is enjoyed by white citizens thereof to inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property.” 42 U.S.C. § 1982. The Supreme Court has noted that Section 1982 supports a claim of discriminatory municipal actions. See City of Memphis v. Greene, 451 U.S. 100, 122-23 (1981) (Section 1982 concerns the right of Black persons to hold and acquire property on an equal basis with whites and the right of Blacks not to have property interests impaired because of their race). Additionally, Section 1982 is assumed to prohibit racial discrimination in the terms, conditions, and services related to housing as fully as Section 3604(b). See also Robert G. Schwemm, Housing Discrimination: Law and Litigation § 10:2, § 27:6 (2017 ed.) (citing Arval A. Morris & L.A. Powe, Jr., Constitutional and Statutory Rights to Open Housing, 44 Wash. L. Rev. 1, 83 (1968) (“Although section 1982 does not explicitly cover discriminatory terms and conditions . . . , the section would be practically nullified if it were not construed to prohibit th[is] practice [].”)). 782 U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1, cl. 4. 783 See, e.g., United States v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515, 531-34 (1996) (applying intermediate scrutiny and demanding “exceedingly persuasive justification” for gender classification); Loving, 388 U.S. at 11 (applying strict scrutiny to racial classification that burdened fundamental right to marriage). 784 See, e.g., San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 1, 29 (1973). 785 Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co., 392 U.S. 409, 413 (1968). 786 Dennis v. County of Fairfax, 55 F.3d 151, 156 (4th Cir. 1995) (refusing to find a private right of action against state actors under Section 1981). 787 Painter’s Mill Grille, LLC v. Brown, 716 F.3d 342, 348 (4th Cir. 2013) (quoting CBOCS West, Inc. v. Humphries, 553 U.S. 442, 447 (2008) (“[The United States Supreme Court’s] precedents have long construed §§ 1981 and 1982 similarly.”)). 788 Patterson v. McLean Credit Union, 491 U.S. 164, 186 (1989) (Section 1981 requires discriminatory intent); Save Our Cemeteries, Inc. v. Archdiocese of New Orleans, Inc., 568 F.2d 1074, 1078 (5th Cir. 1978) (Section 1982 requires proof of discriminatory intent); Hamilton v. Svatik, 779 F.2d 383, 387 (7th Cir. 1985) (same, citing Gen. Bldg. Contractors Ass’n, Inc. v. Pennsylvania, 458 U.S. 375, 387 (1982)); Hammary v. Soles, No. 1:09-CV-781, 2013 WL 1192783, at *9 (M.D.N.C. Mar. 22, 2013) (same); Byrd v. Local 24, I.B.E.W, No. 72-848-M, 1977 WL 15446, at *1 (D. Md. Jun. 13, 1977) (interpreting Jones, 392 U.S. 409, as requiring a showing of discriminatory intent to make out a claim under Section 1982). 789 Spell v. McDaniel, 824 F.2d 1380, 1385 (4th Cir. 1987) (citing Monell, 436 U.S. at 694). 790 Denny v. Elizabeth Arden Salons, Inc., 456 F.3d 427, 434 (4th Cir. 2006); Front Royal & Warren County Indus. Park Corp. v. Town of Front Royal, 135 F.3d 275 (4th Cir. 1998); LeClair v. Saunders, 627 F.2d 606 (2d Cir. 1980). 791 429 U.S. at 267-68. 792 42 U.S.C. § 2000d. See also Davis, supra note 669, at 376-77. 793 See, e.g., Jay Apperson, Board of Public Works Approves Funding for Clean Water and the Chesapeake Bay, Md. Dep’t of the Env’t (Aug. 22, 2018), http://news.maryland.gov/mde/2018/08/22/board-of-public-works-approves-funding-for-cleanwater-and-the-chesapeake-bay-46/; Div. of Envtl. and Financial Assistance, Ohio EPA, Office of Financial Assistance, http://epa. ohio.gov/defa/ofa#16954615-about-us (last visited Mar. 27, 2019). 794 Alexander v. Sandoval, 523 U.S. 275, 279-80 (2001); U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Civ. Rts. Div., Fed. Coordination & Compliance Section, Title VI Legal Manual, https://www.justice.gov/crt/fcs/T6Manual6#101 (last visited Mar. 27, 2019) [hereinafter Title VI Legal Manual]. 795 See Schwemm, supra note 781, at § 29.2 (citing Dowdell, 698 F.2d at 1184-87). 796 See, e.g., 40 C.F.R. § 7.120 (EPA regulation authorizing a party who believes they have been discriminated against to file an administrative complaint with the agency); Title VI Legal Manual, supra note 794. 797 See 40 C.F.R. § 7.35 (EPA regulation permitting disparate impact claims); Title VI Legal Manual, supra note 794. 798 See, e.g., NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., Baltimore Residents and Civil Groups File Title VI Complaint with United States Department of Transportation over Maryland’s Discriminatory Decision to Strip Baltimore of Transportation Funding (Dec. 18, 2015), http://www.naacpldf.org/press-release/baltimore-residents-and-civic-groups-file-title-vi-complaint-united-states-department. 799 See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. §§ 3601 et seq. 800 See 42 U.S.C. §  3601 (“It is the policy of the United States to provide, with constitutional limitations, for fair housing throughout the United States.”); Texas Dep’t of Hous. & Cmty. Affairs v. Inclusive Cmtys. Project, Inc., 135 S. Ct. 2507, 2513 (2015) (stating that the purpose of the FHA is “to eradicate discriminatory practices within a sector of our Nation’s economy”); Otero v. N.Y. City Hous. Auth., 484 F.2d 1122, 1133-34 (2d Cir. 1973) (commenting that the FHA was designed “to prohibit discrimination . . . so that members of minority races would not be condemned to remain in urban ghettos . . . [and] to fulfill . . . the goal of open, integrated residential housing patterns and to prevent the increase of segregation, in ghettos, of racial groups”). 801 Inclusive Cmtys., 135 S. Ct. at 2525; United States v. City of Birmingham, 538 F. Supp. 819, 829-30 (E.D. Mich. 1982), aff’d as modified, 727 F.2d 560 (6th Cir. 1984) (city acted with racially discriminatory intent in violation of the Fair Housing Act by preventing development of housing complex that would have served low-income people and senior citizens). 802 See also Davis, supra note 669, at 379-82 (discussing a potential FHA action for water shutoffs). 803 See, e.g., Md Code Ann., State Gov’t § 20-702; Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 4112.02(H). 804 See, e.g., D.C. Code Ann. § 2-1402.21 (prohibiting housing discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national 98 99 origin, sex, age, marital status, personal appearance, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, familial status, family responsibilities, disability, matriculation, political affiliation, source of income, status as a victim of an intrafamily offense, or place of residence or business of any individual). 805 See, e.g., Md. Code Ann., Comm. Law § 13-303; Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 1345.02. See generally Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 15.4.2. 806 For example, Maryland’s law does not apply to a “public service company, to the extent that the company’s services and operations are regulated by the Public Service Commission.” Md. Code Ann., Comm. Law § 13-104. However, public water utilities are not subject to regulation by the commission in Maryland. See Md. Code Ann., Pub. Util. Cos. § 1-101(ss); Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256, at 60. In Ohio, public utilities are exempted by Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 1345.01(A), which exempts transactions made by companies subject to the public utilities commission. See Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 4905.03. Public utilities that are owned or operated by a municipality are not regulated by the commission. Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 4905.02(A)(3); Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256, at 88. 807 See generally Access to Utility Service, supra note 334. 808 Id. at § 2.1.2 (citing United Fuel Gas Co. v. Railroad Comm’n, 278 U.S. 300 (1929); N.Y. ex. rel. Woodhaven Gaslight Co. v. Public Serv. Comm’n, 269 U.S. 244 (1925); Allen’s Creek Props. v. Clearwater, 679 So. 2d 1172 (Fla. 1996)). Ohio has incorporated this duty into a statute that applies to private water and wastewater companies. See Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 4905.22. 809 Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 2.1.2; see, e.g., Nolte v. City of Olympia, 982 P.2d 659, 667 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999) (as exclusive provider of water and sewer service, city owes public duty to serve all within service area subject to reasonable conditions as allowed by law). 810 Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 2.1.2. 811 Id. at § 2.4.2. 812 Id. at § 6.7. 813 Justin Mitchell, A Columbus Water Employee Did the ‘Feeling Cute Challenge.’ His Post Went Viral., Ledger-Enquirer (Apr. 11, 2019), https://www.ledger-enquirer.com/news/local/article229094774.html. 814 Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 2.6.2; see also Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 43 (discussing water customers’ frustration with ability to seek information from the water department). 815 Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 2.6.2. 816 Kevin Murray & Sara Kominers, Program on Hum. Rts. and the Glob. Econ., Northeastern Univ. Sch. of Law, The Human Right to Water in the United States: A Primer for Lawyers & Community Leaders 4, 11, https://www.northeastern.edu/law/pdfs/ academics/phrge/water-primer.pdf. 817 Id. at 28-34; see also Davis, supra note 669, at 358. 818 Letter from Kary Moss and Sherrilyn Ifill to Catarina de Albuquerque and Leilani Farha (Oct. 16, 2014), https://www. naacpldf.org/wp-content/uploads/Detroit-Water-Shutoff-Letter-to-UN-1.pdf. 819 See, e.g., Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 5, 31-33. In Steep Price, Ms. Jacobson advocated for various tax sale reforms to protect homeowners and residents. 820 Id. 821 Id. 822 See, e.g., Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 5; Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 190. 823 Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 42; Murthy, supra note 263, at 216-17. 824 See, e.g., Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at 41; Navigating Legal Pathways, supra note 256, at 9; Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 41; Murthy, supra note 263, at 211-14; Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 12-13. 825 See, e.g., Wong et al., supra note 205, at 2. 826 Colton, Baltimore’s Conundrum, supra note 279, at ES-9, 44-45. 827 See, e.g., Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 45. 828 Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 42; Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 40-42. 829 See, e.g., Murthy, supra note 263, at 215-16; Jacobson, Keeping the Water On, supra note 269, at 15; Wong et al., supra note 205, at 15; Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 51-52; Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 45. 830 Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 25; Wong et al., supra note 205, at 2, 44-46. 831 See, e.g., Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 45; Murthy, supra note 263, at 218-19; Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 79. 832 See National Coalition for Legislation on Affordable Water, http://affordablewaternow.org/ (last visited Mar. 27, 2019); see also Jones & Moulton, supra note 223, at 33. 833 Murthy, supra note 263, at 214; Wong et al., supra note 205, at 36-38; Amirhadji et al., supra note 244, at 19, 49; Christian-Smith & Gleick et al., supra note 6, at 190. 834 42 U.S.C. §§ 8621-8630; see also Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 8.1.1; Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 61. 835 Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 8.1.2. 836 42 U.S.C. § 8624(b)(2)(B) & (b)(5). 837 In fiscal year 2014, the most recent year that data is available, approximately 49 percent of funds went to heating assistance, seven percent went to cooling aid, 21 percent was used for crisis assistance, and nine percent for weatherization. Libby Perl, Congressional Research Service, LIHEAP: Program and Funding, Congressional Research Service 2 (Jun. 22, 2018), https://fas. org/sgp/crs/misc/RL31865.pdf. 838 LIHEAP Frequently Asked Questions for Consumers, Office of Cmty. Services, U.S. Dep’t of Health & Hum. Serv. (Jan. 19, 2016), https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ocs/resource/consumer-frquently-asked-questions [hereinafter LIHEAP FAQs]; see also Cromwell et al., supra note 205, at 61. 839 See Perl, supra note 837, at 15. See also Access to Utility Service, supra note 334, at § 8.1.1; LIHEAP FAQs, supra note 838. 840 See, e.g., Wong et al., supra note 205, at 1, 46. 841 Jacobson, Steep Price, supra note 433, at 34. As Ms. Jacobson noted, water equality advocates in Baltimore have reported that tax sales lead to increased eviction and homelessness, among other consequences, but more research is needed to determine the full effects of these sales on communities. Id. at 8, 34. This research should be focused on predominantly Black communities across the nation. 100 www.naacpldf.org 212.965.2200 ©2019 The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (“LDF”) is the first and foremost civil and human rights law firm in the United States. Founded in 1940 under the leadership of Thurgood Marshall, LDF’s mission has always been transformative—to achieve racial justice, equality, and an inclusive society. LDF’s victories established the foundations for the civil rights that all Americans enjoy today. This report was produced in collaboration with LDF’s Thurgood Marshall Institute. Launched in 2015, the Institute is a multidisciplinary center within LDF. The Institute complements LDF’s traditional litigation strengths, arming LDF with dedicated support for two critical capabilities in the fight for racial justice: research and targeted advocacy campaigns. 101