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Gravesites vandalized at local cemetery
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To Get White Gold, We Need More Geothermal » Holtville Tribune
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Tribes without clean water demand an end to decades of US government neglect Nina Lakhani © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images
The US government’s haphazard approach to providing Indigenous American tribes with clean drinking water and sanitation must be radically transformed to tackle decades of underfunding and neglect, according to a new report.
An estimated one in 10 Indigenous Americans lack access to safe tap water or basic sanitation – without which a host of health conditions including Covid-19, diabetes, and gastrointestinal disease are more likely.
Among the most affected by water issues are 30 tribes within the Colorado River Basin (CRB), located across California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado, according to researchers from the University of Utah and Colorado in the Water and Tribes Initiative.
Tribes without clean water demand an end to decades of US government neglect
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The Cocopah Indian Tribe is asking the community s support for getting the COVID-19 vaccine.
Most Arizonans are getting their vaccines through their counties, but federally-recognized tribes also have access to vaccines through Indian Health Services the federal agency responsible for the health care of tribal members. Some tribes have decided to get the vaccines through IHS, others are using state-supplied vaccines provided through their local counties. We weren t sure who was going to get the vaccine to the tribe first, said Mike Fila, the emergency preparedness manager for the Cocopah Indian Tribe.
When in doubt, Fila prepared for both possibilities. IHS got the vaccine first, and he said he doesn t regret the choice to go with the IHS facility Fort Yuma Health Care Center which provides health care to the Cocopah and Quechan Indian tribes.