Hundreds of demonstrators paraded through Detroit, protesting the city’s decision to terminate water supplies to thousands of residents with delinquent accounts.
“Fight, fight; water is a human right,” the protesters chanted as they marched the city on Friday. Media estimated their number at 300-1,000 people.
The protest was organized by the group National Nurses United,
which says the termination of water supplies, in the middle of
summer, could turn into a public health emergency. The group’s
co-president, Jean Ross, called the shutoffs an “attack on
the basic human right of access to safe, clean water.”
“What’s happening here is inhumane,” Ross told WWJ news
radio. “We know that you need water to sustain yourself and
no one, no one should shut off the water to the people.”
Detroit Must Stop Shutting Off Water To People Who Cannot Afford To Pay http://t.co/VpJP2EXKeShttp://t.co/zz66i9B0mH#DetroitWater
— AmnestyInternational (@amnesty) July 18, 2014
Between March and June, the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department
suspended service to 15,200 customers, Greg Eno, a department
spokesman, told the New York Times. About another 92,000
customers, who are at least 60 days late on their utility bill or
more than $150 behind remain at risk of losing water supplies.
This week, Steven W. Rhodes, the federal bankruptcy judge
handling the case, said the situation was damaging Detroit’s
reputation and called on city leaders to better handle it.
In a statement released on Friday, however, Kevyn D. Orr, the
city’s emergency manager, said that of the accounts where water
was suspended, more than half were made current within 24 hours,
and service was restored. He said that assistance was available
for customers with “demonstrated financial need.”
In March, about half the department’s customers, including
businesses, had outstanding balances, amounting to $118 million
in charges, the department said.
Joining the ranks of the protesters were United Automobile
Workers President Dennis Williams and Congressman John Conyers.
“Water should be available to everybody,” Conyers told
ABC Detroit. “It shouldn’t be something that only people who
can afford it can get.”
Williams said turning off the tap on citizens’ homes proves that
“there’s something wrong in America.”
“Right now in a household there is child thirsty who cannot
have a drink,” Williams said. “Right now there is an
elderly person who is ill that needs fresh water. There [are]
children waiting to take a fresh bath and have clean water to
drink.”
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