Snell spreads her monthly bills across the kitchen table like a puzzle with too many pieces. Rent: $800. Utilities: $150. Groceries: whatever's left from her federal nutrition assistance. Then she adds the line item that didn't exist in her mother's budget: bottled water, $200 a month, five cases that disappear faster than she can carry them up the stairs.
In Jackson, Mississippi, hydration has become a line-item expense that competes directly with food. When your city has issued more than 750 boil-water notices since 2016, drinking water transforms from a utility into a grocery store purchase, paid for with money meant for meals.
Residents pay twice for the same service: city water bills arrive monthly whether the water is safe or not, while bottled water bills pile up at the grocery store.
This is a slow-motion exodus driven by household economics. The arithmetic is unforgiving. Snell's $200 monthly water budget could buy two weeks of groceries for her family. Instead, it buys the peace of mind that comes from knowing tonight's dinner won't be cooked with water that might make her children sick.
Nsombi Lambright has run these numbers too. Even when Jackson isn't under an official boil-water notice, her family continues buying bottled water for cooking and teeth-brushing. The city's all-clear doesn't override years of uncertainty. She knows Jackson averaged 55 water main breaks per 100 miles of pipe annually from 2017 to 2021, nearly four times the safe rate. That statistic lives in her monthly budget as a permanent water expense that families in neighboring counties don't carry.
| Jackson's Water Crisis by the Numbers |
|---|
| 750+ boil-water notices since 2016 |
| 55 water main breaks per 100 miles of pipe annually (2017-2021) |
| $200/month average household bottled water expense |
| $36 million in federal relief funds still unreleased (as of August 2025) |
| 20 families displaced by water shutoffs this summer |
The breaking point comes when you realize you're paying twice for the same service. City water bills arrive monthly whether the water is safe or not. Bottled water bills pile up at the grocery store. As longtime resident Brooke Floyd puts it:
"Residents have already paid this debt 50 times over through buying bottled water, enduring boil notices, and covering repeated plumbing costs."
This summer, the math became impossible for about 20 families when JXN Water disconnected service to apartment complexes in south Jackson. LaQuita Glasper had lived at Blossom Apartments for four years, paying her water costs through rent, when the building owner's $422,000 debt to the city suddenly became her family's displacement crisis.
Glasper started apartment hunting immediately, focusing on The Park at St. Andrews. Then she discovered that complex was also behind on its water bill. The situation turned absurd: in Jackson, even the backup housing options carry water risk. A judge ordered water restored to her building for five days, not to let families stay, but to help them move out. Then it was cut off again.
Glasper chose family separation over homelessness, splitting up to stay with relatives while searching for housing in a market where landlords increasingly factor water reliability into rent prices. Her decision represents the brutal economics of system failure. When basic municipal services require private backup systems, every family becomes their own utility company.
The housing market now reflects this uncertainty in ways real estate agents don't advertise. One former Jackson resident who moved to Florence in nearby Rankin County describes the economic difference: "No gunshots, good water, good sewer. It's like night and day." His monthly budget no longer includes a water line item. That $200 goes to other things now.
Veronica Jackson, who works in foster home licensing, has added water procurement to her time management between her full-time job and volunteering with her sons' football teams. Getting basics has become "like having a second job." Time that used to be free now costs money, and money that used to buy other things now buys water.
Abdul-Tawwab, who manages ground support for the Mississippi Rapid Response Coalition, says the most common request his team receives is for drinking water. They spend their days delivering bottles and testing residents' taps, with results often coming back positive for lead and E. coli. Each positive test result represents another family adding bottled water to their permanent shopping list.
Families are quietly calculating whether they can afford to stay somewhere that can't deliver what cities are supposed to provide. Almost $36 million in federal relief funds granted to Mississippi in 2021 still haven't reached city administrators as of August 2025. While bureaucrats debate funding, families make monthly decisions about whether home is still home when it requires a water budget.
Floyd notes the particular frustration that those overseeing the water system have met residents' concerns with condescension, downplaying the daily reality of families choosing between groceries and hydration. The water crisis becomes a housing affordability crisis, measured not just in rent but in the hidden costs of staying.
Snell, a Jackson native, puts it simply: "I really want to leave Jackson so bad." Her $200 monthly water expense represents more than financial strain. It's a recurring vote of no confidence in her city, purchased with money meant for food. Every case of bottled water is a small calculation about whether she can afford to wait for a system that might never be fixed, or whether it's time to join the slow exodus to places where drinking water doesn't require a monthly budget line.
Things to follow up on...
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Federal funding delays: Almost $36 million in federal relief funds granted to Mississippi in 2021 through the American Rescue Plan Act still haven't been released to city administrators as of August 2025.
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Recent boil notices: Jackson water systems continue experiencing failures, with multiple boil water notices issued in September 2025 affecting different parts of the city despite ongoing repair efforts.
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Apartment complex shutoffs: Water disconnections to south Jackson housing complexes like Blossom and Chapel Ridge represent a practice run for possible future shutoffs as the city struggles with unpaid utility bills.
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Community testing results: Grassroots organizations delivering bottled water and testing residents' taps often find positive results for heavy metals like lead and bacteria like E. coli, confirming residents' safety concerns.

