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Community-driven and water quality indicators of sanitation system failures in a rural U.S. community

Author

Listed:
  • Lorelay Mendoza Grijalva
  • Allisa G. Hastie
  • Meili Gong
  • Brenda Rojas Cala
  • Brandon Hunter
  • Stephanie Wallace
  • Rojelio Mejia
  • Catherine Flowers
  • Khalid K. Osman
  • William A. Tarpeh

Abstract

Safe sanitation access is commonly believed to be ubiquitous in high-income countries; however, researchers and community advocates have exposed a glaring lack of access for many low-income communities and communities of color across the U.S. While this disparity has been identified and quantified at a high level, local and household-level implications of sanitation failures remain ill-defined. We develop a set of user-based and environmental measures to assess the performance of centralized wastewater systems, septic systems, and straight-piped systems in Lowndes County, Alabama. We combine qualitative, survey, and environmental sampled data to holistically compare user experiences across infrastructure types. This integrated approach reveals new routes of exposure to wastewater through informal household maintenance and system backups and provides evidence for the spread of wastewater-like contamination throughout the community. This work elucidates the severity of sanitation failures in one rural U.S. community and provides a framework to assess sanitation quality in other contexts with limited sanitation access in high-income countries.

Suggested Citation

  • Lorelay Mendoza Grijalva & Allisa G. Hastie & Meili Gong & Brenda Rojas Cala & Brandon Hunter & Stephanie Wallace & Rojelio Mejia & Catherine Flowers & Khalid K. Osman & William A. Tarpeh, 2025. "Community-driven and water quality indicators of sanitation system failures in a rural U.S. community," Papers 2503.22938, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2503.22938
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Jennifer S. Carrera & Catherine Coleman Flowers, 2018. "Sanitation Inequity and the Cumulative Effects of Racism in Colorblind Public Health Policies," American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 77(3-4), pages 941-966, May.
    2. J. Tom Mueller & Stephen Gasteyer, 2021. "The widespread and unjust drinking water and clean water crisis in the United States," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 12(1), pages 1-8, December.
    3. Shiloh Deitz & Katie Meehan, 2019. "Plumbing Poverty: Mapping Hot Spots of Racial and Geographic Inequality in U.S. Household Water Insecurity," Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 109(4), pages 1092-1109, July.
    4. Sorenson, Susan B. & Morssink, Christiaan & Campos, Paola Abril, 2011. "Safe access to safe water in low income countries: Water fetching in current times," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 72(9), pages 1522-1526, May.
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