Eddy Perez: The Necessity of Data and Government Involvement in Meeting the New SDGs
Here in the United States, newspaper headlines, radio talk show hosts and television news anchors are screaming about the city of Flint, Michigan and its abject failure to provide basic WASH services to its citizens. To a large degree, the impetus for this outrage and subsequent flurry of promises to address the problem stemmed from data showing high levels of lead in the drinking water and high incidence of lead poisoning in children. It turns out that the water contamination problem started over two years ago and that government officials at both the local and state level were aware of the problems and risks, but largely ignored or even flat out denied the existence of a dangerous threat to public health. Increasingly, political observers attribute this lack of action to the fact that Flint is a poor city with a high percentage of African-American residents.