Mississippi Boiling: Boil Water Alerts and their Impact on the Unexcused Absence Rate in Public Schools in Jackson, Mississippi

Author:

Kim Myungjin1,Devito Roberta2,Durate Fabio3,Tieskens Koen4,Luna Marcos5,Miranda Arianna3,Mazzarello Martina3,Otts Stepanie6,Etzel Clark7,Burks Shaunessey2ORCID,Crossley Kayla2,Lee Nina2,Walker Erica2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Kyungpook National University

2. Brown University

3. Massachusetts Institute of Technology

4. Boston University

5. Salem State University

6. University of Mississippi School of Law

7. University of Mississippi

Abstract

Abstract The water crisis in Jackson, Mississippi, has recently made national and international headlines as a major environmental catastrophe, impacting the public health and well-being of its residents. Environmental justice concerns have focused primarily on race and class as 83% of Jackson’s residents are Black and 25% of all residents live in poverty. Lost in the conversation are the public health implications for Jackson’s most vulnerable–its children, who make up 25% of the population. Currently, the only mechanism by which residents understand the water quality issues in real-time are boil water alerts that are issued when the city determines that water is unsafe to drink. Using data on boil water alerts (BWA) collected from the City of Jackson’s Water/Sewer Business Administration Office; school attendance data from Jackson’s Public School District, and data from the American Community Survey, we add an important layer to the current conversation by analyzing how boil water alerts disrupt student learning. In 2020 alone Jackson issued 454 BWA. We show that each time a BWA is issued, unexcused absence rates statistically significantly increase by 1% - 10%. These impacts were most pronounced in elementary and high schools with the majority (> 92%) non-white student body. In two specific cases, we show statistically significant decreases in unexcused absences in schools where 100% of the student body receive free and reduced lunches.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference64 articles.

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2. V. A critical review of point-of-use drinking water treatment in the United States;Wu J;npj Clean Water,2021

3. EPA. Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) Resources and FAQs, (2022).

4. The widespread and unjust drinking water and clean water crisis in the United States;Mueller JT;Nat Commun,2021

5. National trends in drinking water quality violations;Allaire M;Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A,2018

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