New Tool Spotlights Areas for Drinking Water Interventions in Texas

Ensuring that everyone has access to safe, reliable, and affordable drinking water is an example of a wicked problem. Wicked problems are issues with numerous complex interdependent factors that make them seem impossible to solve. The problem of drinking water, even today, is particularly wicked in the U.S. Ensuring quality and affordability across communities requires alignment between hydrologic, institutional, and financial resources.

This problem is particularly acute in Texas—a state increasingly known, unfortunately, for its struggles to provide safe and affordable drinking water. There are various strategies aimed at addressing this problem, from an array of new funding sources to targeted technical assistance programs. Still, as we’ve highlighted in earlier analyses, a significant portion of such funding doesn’t ultimately reach communities most in need. 

Thankfully, timely, well-organized data can serve as a key for unlocking otherwise hidden connections between funding and those most at risk when it comes to reliable access to safe drinking water. Given the fragmented nature of so much drinking water-related data out there, how should such a key be designed? And, what would using it to prioritize investments in drinking water infrastructure look like in a place like Texas?

How did we create the Texas Water System Prioritization Tool?

Figure 1. Drinking water utility boundaries in East Texas colored by percent unemployment and climate vulnerability. Jefferson County is circled in black as a location of interest. 

For example, if someone was interested in providing resources to utilities that serve vulnerable communities at risk of climate change impacts, they could view that relationship in the tool by selecting the “% Unemployment” and “(EDF) Climate Vulnerability Index,” and then clicking the “bivariate mapping” checkbox (Figure 1).

Examining the water utility boundaries in this example—shaded by a two-variable scale—we can see that utilities with both high unemployment rates and high climate vulnerability indices are marked in dark purple. Utilities serving Jefferson County (circled above in Figure 1) rank high in both categories. Further analysis reveals that these utilities are located in severely impaired water basins (over 65% impairment), near water hazards, and within one of the country’s most climate-vulnerable areas. They also face future challenges to meet the projected population growth and municipal water demands by 2070. 

While many of these utilities have received funding at least once from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund, the last time a utility within this county was funded was 2019. Using the tool to explore relationships and trends like these can help users identify target areas for additional research to inform future resource allocation decisions.  

How can I use this in my work?

Beyond looking at relationships between variables from different datasets, the tool is also useful for answering more complex questions based on specific research interests or project objectives. Here are some examples to describe how this tool could be used for your own work: 

Figure 2. Utility boundaries in the South East Texas Regional Planning region colored by superfund and hazardous waste indicators. Learn how to create maps like this in the tool here.

Figure 3. Map showing characteristics of the Craft Turney Water Supply Corporation and proximity to the City of Carthage. Learn how to create maps like this in the tool here.  

Key findings from our analysis.

In addition to creating an interactive tool for users to explore the data we’ve collected, we also did some digging ourselves—focused on East Texas. Our hope is that insights drawn from our initial focus in East Texas can inform future investments (and continued analysis) at scale across (and beyond) the state. Below are some key takeaways from our analysis of utilities located in the region:

  • Projects in East Texas receive less total assistance under State Revolving Fund programs, but have a higher per capita principal forgiveness rate in comparison to the rest of Texas. Of the 635 drinking water systems in East Texas, there are 41 utilities that have received assistance under the State Revolving Fund program. Further exploration could shed light on utilities that have been unsuccessful in receiving funds, and those that have not applied at all. 

  • Approximately 12% of utilities in East Texas have an open health-based violation, and 24% have had a health-based violation over the past 5 years. All reported violations (health, non-health, total), were not significantly correlated with any socioeconomic or utility characteristics. Additional research could explore violations by system size to elucidate potential relationships with socioeconomic variables or utility characteristics. 

  • With the data available in East Texas, although communities within the lowest 20% of income pay less for water, the cost of water represents a larger share (up to 3.6%) of their annual income in comparison to the highest 20% income bracket (up to 1.5%). More resources are needed to complete this dataset to better understand the relative financial burden of drinking water on communities in Texas. 

  • Based on the data we have available to us, utilities that draw surface water from a reservoir located in a highly impaired basin are reporting health-based violations at a higher frequency in East Texas. It is worth analyzing the link between source water and drinking water quality - once the connection is made, it’s possible that addressing impaired basins may also improve drinking water quality. 

Why does this matter and where do we go from here?

Ensuring that everyone has safe, reliable, and affordable drinking water remains a wicked problem. But with this tool’s organized, comprehensive, and accessible data in hand,  we can unlock vital connections between available funding and those at risk of losing access to safe drinking water. Leveraging that opportunity to untangle the complex factors that affect drinking water equity, we hope, will position advocates, researchers, policymakers, utilities, and communities to improve the durability of Texas drinking water systems for generations to come. Looking ahead, we see several priority areas that are ripe for action using this tool: 

  • Research: This tool marks the first time that robust drinking water data sources have been integrated in a simple, accessible way for users. By bringing this data together, stakeholders are better positioned to dive deeply into the complex relationships and factors that influence the durability of drinking water. We’ve also added functionality to allow users to download our entire dataset, methodology, and underlying code for more sophisticated analyses that will support holistic understandings of water system durability. 

  • Policy Reform: Findings from this tool can also allow us to support water infrastructure advocacy by identifying current funding gaps and helping to increase equitable investments, targeted interventions, and better outcomes. Insights from the tool can likewise guide the construction of coalitions and lobbying efforts tied to drinking water infrastructure in Texas. 

  • Technical assistance: Data provided by this tool can facilitate coordination among technical assistance (TA) providers, and thereby guide future decision-making, bolster other resources, and inform policies to support such assistance.


Interested in learning more about, or supporting, this work? We want to hear from you!

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